Northwest Cherry Shipments Ramping Up Following Cool Weather Slowing Harvest

Northwest Cherry Shipments Ramping Up Following Cool Weather Slowing Harvest

Sweet cherry shipments are well underway in the Northwest, and produce is arriving at destination points across the country for the 2021 crop. 

The cherry industry has shipped just under 600,000 boxes total, much less than forecasted before cooler weather arrived.

July may not hit the high volumes experienced in 2017 (15 million) or 2018 (13.5 million), but at an estimated 11.3 million boxes the 2021 crop should deliver just under the 5-year average of 11.8 million boxes in July.

As detailed in the Northwest Cherry Growers last report, the end of May brought cool and unsettled weather which delayed the first pick for many of the early growers.  Similar weather patterns have largely continued to be the case as harvest slowly spreads and picks up speed in other spots across the Northwest.  Atypical storm fronts and lower daytime temperatures have caused growers to delay picking in order to allow their fruit to reach optimal maturity before harvest, which has led to an overall slower start to harvest and limited initial volumes.

While most growers are not looking at a full crop this season, their combined volume will steadily increase and should produce a steady supply through mid-August.

Yakima Valley cherries grossing – about $6900 to Chicago; $9700 to New York City.