Posts Tagged “cherry shipments”

Record NW Cherry Shipments Occurring

By |

DSCN4890by Northwest Cherry Growers

Through July 5th, the Northwest cherry industry has shipped over  15 million boxes (20-pound equivalent), including 13.97 million boxes of dark sweets.  Contributing to that was a June that  finished even larger than predictions, with a total of 12.3 million boxes.  That’s a 3 percent increase over last year’s new record of 11.9 million boxes.

Cherries were everywhere for the 4th of July.  And with more retail ads breaking nationally, momentum for cherry shipments out of the holiday appears to be maintained.  In fact, this July 5th saw more cherry shipments than ever before, topping 2012’s record of 523,000 by another 50,000 boxes.  The 7-day shipment average through the 4th holiday (6/28-7/4) was the second highest on record at 452k boxes, with only 2009’s ultra-compressed season seeing more boxes per day at 505,652.

Total Rainier shipments are just below 1.47 million 15-pound boxes. Rainier shipments per day have decreased from a daily high this season of over 95,000 boxes to a weekly average ending on the 5th of 17,000 per day.  However, beautiful cherries remain in some orchards and shipments of yellow cherries will continue to trickle out to displays worldwide.

A study performed by the Nielsen Perishables Group in 2014 found the biggest factor behind a late-season purchase decision by a consumer was, in fact, the awareness that it was the “late season” for cherries… Put another way, roughly 1 out of 3 cherry buyers don’t make their first purchase until they realize it’s their LAST CHANCE TO BUY CHERRIES FOR THE SEASON.

Top retailers each season use that to their advantage, and communicate the late season opportunity by communicating that at the shelf level.  Participants in the North American in-store radio program will be hearing the switch from trivia & Holiday related ads to Buy Now, Freeze Now messaging to support multiple-unit sales. For those with an NWCG Promotional Ad Program in place, promotions are available for circular-inclusion of similar messaging.

Washington cherries – grossing about $6500 to New York City.

Read more »

Shipping Outlook for Cherries, Blueberries, Corn

By |

DSCN7672Here’s a glimpse of cherry shipments from around the U.S., as well as blueberry loadings from the Northwest.  There also is a final outlook at late season sweet corn shipments from Georgia, and some states that will follow.

Cherry Shipments

U.S. sweet cherry production is projected to be down 6 percent this year.

About 318,000 tons are likely to ship in 2016, down from 338,000 tons in 2015, according to the June 22 Cherry Production report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service.

Production is down this year in both industry leader Washington and in California, which produces the second most sweet cherries, according to the report.  Washington cherry shipments are now hitting a peak, while California cherry shipments are virtually finished for the year.

Washington production is expected to fall from 210,000 tons to 195,000 tons.  Shipments from California, which was hit hard by spring rains, decreased from 68,000 to 60,000 tons.

Production in industry No. 3 Oregon is expected to increase from 41,000 to 42,000 tons. Michigan production also should be up, from 15,900 to 21,000 tons.

Washington cherries – grossing about $5500 to Atlanta.

Blueberry Shipments

Oregon’s 350 growers grow and ship blueberries from 11,000 acres.

Looking at 2016 production, the Beaver State is expecting to break 100 million pounds for the first time.

Washington’s 275 growers in the Evergreen State farm blueberries on 15,000 acres.  The Washington blues harvest ramped up on May 30 in eastern Washington, and production started from Skagit around June 20 with shipments picking up in Whatcom a few days later.

The state’s producers are looking at production of 118 million pounds of blueberries, up from 103 million a year ago.

 

Sweet Corn Shipments

This is the last week of peak shipments of sweet corn out of Georgia.  However, declining volume will be available until mid July.

Corn loadings then switch to Delaware in mid-July, in Ohio about July 20th and in New York about July 25th .  Once Georgia finishes shipping, most of these other area are typically shipped regionally.

Southern Georgia corn, blueberries and vegetables – grossing about $3200 to Boston.

 

 

 

 

Read more »

Good Shipments for the 4th of July

By |

DSCN1324+1Good volume and produce loading opportunities are expected leading into celebrating our nation’s independence.   Here’s a look at a number of fruits and vegetables that are popular Fourth of July items.

Cherry Shipments

A 4 percent drop in cherry shipments is estimated from the previous 19.8 million boxes.   Loadings now appear to be more like 18.4 million boxes.   About 10 million boxes of cherries will be shipped during June and almost 8 million in July.

The decline is due to a compression with the bloom period, so there will be compression in harvest.  This will translate into fewer days for shipments.

Loadings for the East Coast should be especially heavy the week of Father’s Day for July 4 and Canada Day on July 1.  Heavy volume will continue the first half of  July.

Berry Shipments

Northwest blueberry shipments will be heavy, especially for the Fourth of July.  This also in the time with initial loadings will start for Michigan blueberries.

In California’s Watsonville and Salinas district, strawberry shipments were not hurt by the cool weather that resulted in quality issues with some vegetables.

Peak Watsonville strawberry shipments and other berries are occurring and will continue into mid-July.  Weekly fresh strawberry volumes exceeded 7 million trays in May, roughly on par with last year.

Blueberry, blackberry and raspberry shipments are a little early out of the Pacific Northwest.

Sweet Corn Shipments

Georgia sweet corn volume should be light through mid-June but begin increasing significantly by June 17th through the Fourth of July.  Normal shipments are seen leading into the Fourth of July.

The majority of the nation’s  sweet corn shipments leading up the Fourth, originate from Georgia

Watermelon Shipments

Georgia should begin shipping watermelons in big volume by June 15th.

Rain-caused losses in Texas, the end of Nogales, Ariz., (Mexican) season and the tail end of central Florida shipments.  All of these factors will mean excellent loading opportunities for Georgia watermelon shipments.

South Carolina should start watermelon loadings by June 24th, while North Carolina will get underway by June 29th.

 

 

 

 

Read more »

A National Produce Shipping Update from 6 Different States

By |

DSCN0492+1A number of states are just getting underway with spring produce shipments, plus we through in some updates on a few that have been shipping all along.

Cherry Shipments

California cherry shipments have been underway for a week or more out of the San Joaquin Valley.  Good volume is expected next week (May 2-6).  Good loading opportunities will continue for several weeks, before being replaced by shipments out of the Yakima Valley in Washington state.

Asparagus Shipments

Asparagus loadings from three separate regions should be good leading up to Mother’s Day, Sunday, May 8th.  California, Washington and Mexico have all been shipping in the second half of April.

California volume remains steady, and Washington state came out of the gate with good supplies.  Baja California and other Mexican shipping areas have been ramping up in April and should have good supplies for about the next six weeks.

Idaho Potato Shipments

Idaho potato shipments are remaining fairly steady from week to week, averaging over 1600 truck load equivalents, primarily out of the Upper Valley and the Twin Falls areas.

Idaho potatoes – grossing about $4000 to Atlanta.

Colorado Potato Shipments

The Rocky Mountain state is the nation’s second largest potato shipper.  The San Luis is averaging over 600 potatoes being shipped weekly.

Colorado potato shipments – grossing about $1500 to Dallas.

Washington Apple Shipments

Washington state is shipping more apples and pears than the rest of the nation combined.   Both apples and pears are being loaded from the Yakima and Wenatchee Valleys.

Washington apples – grossing about $5000 to Orlando.

Georgia Vegetable Shipments

Southern Georgia remains pretty dormant right now, but spring vegetables shipments will be picking up in the next few weeks.  Look for light to moderate volume with everything from beans, to cabbage, cucumbers, carrots, greens and more in early May.  Vidalia onions shipments just started this week.

Georgia vegetables – grossing about $2200 to New York City.

New Jersey Blueberry Shipments

New Jersey blueberry shipments should get underway in mid June.  New Jersey produced 57 million pounds of blueberries in 2014.  Approximately 82 percent of the state’s blueberry acreage is in Atlantic County.

Read more »

NW Cherry Growers Preliminary Shipping Recap

By |

CherryPixby Northwest Cherry Growers

With the season drawing practically to a close, the Northwest Cherry Growers are reporting a preliminary count of cherry shipments totalling 20.52 million boxes (20-pound equivalent).  That’s less than 00.25% variance from the NWCG round 3 crop estimate published on May 29th, though lower in May and higher in June volume than the curve projection anticipated.  Not only was it the earliest crop in at least 20 years, but it was also bigger than all but two of them (2012, 2014) and over in 81 days.

June saw a record 12.6 million boxes, which included accelerated volume by growers working to stay ahead of the heat waves.  The Northwest has seen high temperatures over the past few years, but the record-shattering heat was an entirely different event.  Statistically speaking, a 1-in-400 years event.  Early season weather challenges also reduced the northwest crop, including an estimated 300,000 boxes of Rainier cherries.

July was the smaller of the two months this season – something we haven’t seen since 2005 (7m June, 4.5m July) – but still delivered 7.4 million boxes.  May shipped just over 380,000 boxes and August saw just over 70,000 boxes.  An August total that low hasn’t been recorded since the 2000 season.   Exports were strong this year, coming in just over 30% of the shipped crop.

Yakima Valley apples and stone fruit – grossing about $6500 to Boston.

Read more »

Western Shipments: From B.C. to California and Texas, New Mexico

By |

IMG_5966Here’s a quick look at Western produce shipments, starting in British Columbia, extending down to California and wrapping up in West Texas and New Mexico.

While Washington state cherry shipments are in a seasonal decline, loadings from British Columbia are picking up.

British Columbia certainly is no Washington state when it comes to volume, but the Canadians do provide decent loadings for about a four to six-week period every year.  Shipments from an area ranging from Kelowna to Creston are underway with about 100,000 cases already shipped.  There is an estimated 500,000 additional boxes to be shipped.  The season is expected to last through the third week of August.

California Produce Shipments

Stone fruit shipments continue steady from week to week out of the San Joaquin Valley, led by peaches….From the valley’s Westside district various melons are being loaded, led by cantaloupe, averaging about a 1000 loads per week….Moving to the Watsonville district movement continues steady with strawberries, averaging around 875 truck loads weekly. California produce rates continue to decline, some by as much 15 percent in the past week.

Watsonville berries and Salinas Valley vegetables – grossing about $6500 to New York City.

San Joaquin Valley stone fruit, melons and other items – grossing about $4300 Dallas.

Texas/New Mexico Produce Shipments

In West Texas, the Hereford High Plains area has light, but increasing volume with potatoes, with some shippers also in Eastern New Mexico.  Southern New Mexico also continues to ship onions.

Read more »

Northwest Fruit Shipments are Underway

By |

IMG_6649It should be a good summer for produce truckers who haul fruit out of the Northwest.

Cherry shipments are underway, while most other stone fruit crops will begin in mid-July, picking up speed as the calendar switches to August, and then going strong until the end of the month, with the late fruit still shipping out in early September.  Northwest stone fruit shipments to Canada have been showing significant increases in recent years.

A little over one-third of American households purchase peaches, five times more than buy kale.  Kale, of course, is the hot, trendy vegetable in America these days.

Apricot production ramped up in early June and was expected to continue through the month.  Apricots are expected to be similar in size to last year’s large 7,500 ton crop.  Organic apricots are making their mark.  It may only be 2 percent of the U.S. category, but it’s growing at three times the rate of conventional.

Pear Shipments

The 2015 fresh pear shipments are forecast at nearly 20.4 million box equivalents, which equates to approximately 451,000 tons of fresh pears.   The projection is 2 percent higher than the five-year average, and 2 percent lower than last year’s crop.  The estimate was collected from fresh pear growers in Wenatchee and Yakima, WA, and Mid-Columbia and Medford, OR, growing districts.

Northwest pear shipments start in late July with Starkrimson, followed  by the Bartlett harvest in early August.  Anjou, Red Anjou, Bosc, Comice, Concorde, Forelle and Seckel will be picked from late August through September.

Apples, pears and cherries – grossing about $7300 to Orlando.

 

 

 

Read more »

Northwest Cherries Shipments are Coming Soon

By |

DSCN3914Washington cherry shipments, which typically provide some of the better produce rates, should get underway in late May.

The first cherry harvest in the Northwest is expect around May 20-25 — which could possibly be the earliest harvest in 25-years.  Washington state provides the bulk of cherry shipments, with lesser volume coming out Oregon and Idaho.

The early start for shipping should ensure heavy volume before traditional pre-Fourth of July deliveries.

The Washington crop is about seven days ahead of last year and 10 days ahead of the five-year average.

Northwest cherry shipments may hit 10 million cartons in June and possibly about the same amount in July.  Though no official estimate has been released, overall Northwest 2015 cherry ahipments are expected near 20 million cartons, down from about 23 million cartons a year ago.

However, truck loadings will come on earlier than in 2014.  This should result in heavy shipments throughout June leading up to the Independence Day holiday.

The Northwest cherry shipping season is typically about 85 days, and this year the shipping season will be closer to 80 days. The back end of the season in August will have a few less shipping days.

Washington Apple Shipments

Until cherry shipments take off, apples may be your best bet as a lot of product remains to be shipped this season.

Yakima and Wenatchee Valley apples – grossing about $4450 to Orlando.

 

Read more »

Another Big Season in U.S. for Apple Haulers; Cherry Shipments on Record Course

By |

DSCN4450Produce truckers will once again have plenty of opportunities to haul another large apple crop this season…Also, here’s a brief  roundup of what appears will be a record cherry shipping season coming to an end.

The third largest shipments of U.S. apples on record is expected for the 2014-15 season, which recently started.

The U.S. Apple Association is is predicting total U.S. apple shipments will be 263.8 million 42-pound cartons, which is very close to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s estimate, also released in August, which was 259.2 million.

Estimates from individual regions are: 174.3 million 42-pound units from the west (compared to 174.5 million from the USDA estimate) 55.9 million in the east (54.4 from the USDA) and 33.6 million in the Midwest (30.3 million from the USDA). Washington, the largest producing state, has an estimated production of 162 million 42-pound units for overall production. The industry has cited 140.2 million units as an anticipated fresh pack this year.

Cherry Shipments

Northwest cherry shipments, which are nearing the end of the season, could  have record loadings . As of August 18, shippers were on pace to ship 23.4 million boxes of fruit, which would break the 2012 record of 23.1 million cartons.  The revised estimate is up from pre-season estimates of more than 22 million boxes.

Washington state fruit – grossing about $4500 to Chicago.

Read more »

Shipping Points Around the USA, and the Potential for Loadings for July 4th Deliveries

By |

DSCN3783Here’s a checker board summarizing potential loading opportunities (or lack thereof) from areas ranging from the Southeast to the Northeast — and the Northwest.

Georgia Blueberry Shipments

Georgia blueberries are entering their peak shipping period from the Alma and Baxley areas that will continue through the Fourth of July.  The season will end soon after the holiday.

Georgia blueberry and mixed vegetables – grossing about $3100 to New York City.  Vidalia onions from storage – about $3900 to New York City.

Florida Produce Shipments

Not much happening for produce haulers in Florida this time of the year.  However, avocado shipments get underway in late June, with decent volume coming in July.  About 1.1 million bushels are expected to be shipped this season, similar to the volume of a year ago.

Western Berry Shipments

Strawberry shipments out of Watsonville, CA  and blueberry volumes the Pacific Northwest should be good leading up to the Fourth of July.

Watsonville strawberries and Salinas mixed vegetables – grosssing about $8300 to New York City; often higher towards the end of the week.

Northwest Apricot, Cherry Shipments

Apricot shipments get underway in light volume this week, with much better volume next week from the Yakima and Wenatchee valleys of Washington.  Apricot volume is predicted to be up 9 percent over last season.  Cherry shipments have started.  Although no record loadings are predicted, it is still one of the biggest crops on record.

New York Produce Shipments

Late start due to weather will probably limit  New York state  sweet corn loadings.

Watermelon Shipments

Watermelon shipments in many areas, particiularly on the East Coast are late, and loading opportunities will be down from normal prior to Independence Day.

North Florida watermelons – grossing about $3700 to New York City.

 

 

 

 

Read more »