Watermelons used to be the worse item a produce hauler could haul because they had to be loaded and unloaded by hand, which could lead to outrageous unloading charges. But most melons are now placed in bins on pallets and handled by forklifts. Unloading those bulk load wasn’t practical. Truckers are paid to drive, not chuck melons.
As we plunge further into spring, it is appearing watermelon shipments will be similar to last year. Domestic production from the period April 1 through June 1 shows the following forecasted volumes: Florida/499.7 million pounds; Texas/150.5 million pounds; California/59.5 million pounds; Arizona/14.6 million pounds; and Georgia/3.3 million pounds.
During this period, Mexico is forecasted to export 523.8 million pounds. Volume exported by Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Panama tails off at this time.
As shipments increase heading towards Memorial Day, the volume should peak at about 45 million pounds per day.
At 16 pounds per watermelon, you’re talking close to 3 million individual watermelons sold on a single day.
Florida is the biggest contributor for the holiday. But Texas is usually fully up to speed by then to help offset the decline on Mexican imports. California and Arizona are also shipping at that time to help supply west of the Rockies.
Florida watermelons, vegetables – grossing about $3000 to Philadelphia.