Posts Tagged “potato loads”

Northwest Apples, Pears, Potatoes, Onions are Moving in Good Volume

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IMG_6777While pear volume in the Northwest is much less than apples, one of the important facts is pears mix well with apples in loads.  Northwest onion loads are another big item, but few things load well with onions – garlic being an exception.  Potatoes are much more compatible for mixing with numerous items  in the same trailer.

About 70 percent of Northwest pears remain to be shipped, which is very similar to this time last year.    Over 6.5 million boxes of pears have already been loaded this season.  Northwest shippers are on track to ship about 22.2 million boxes of pears, which would be the largest on record and 14 percent more than last season.  Most pear varieties should be available for hauling through January.

Quality is good this season, with about 88 percent the of fruit grading out at No. 1-quality.  The Yakima and Wenachee valleys in Washington state are averaging about 600 truck load equivalents of pear shipments weekly.

By contrast, from the same area in Washington state, about 2,500 truck load equivalents of apples are being loaded each week.  It is another huge apple crop to say the least.

Washington’s Columbia Basin and the adjacent Umatilla Basin in Oregon have  both potato loads and onion loads in good volume, but the amount does not approach the state’s fruit totals.

Washington apples and pears – grossing about $6800 to New York City.

Columbia Basin potatoes and onions- about $6300 to New York City.

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A Coast-to-Coast Fall Outlook for Fresh Produce Shipments

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DSCN0091From Washington state apples, to Nebraska and Texas potatoes, as well as North Carolina sweet potatoes and more, here’s some fresh produce loads to consider.

Washington Apple Loads

Apple shipments are really picking up from Washington state’s Yakima and Wenatchee valleys.  They have finally got the old crop out the way and the focus has shifted to new season fruit.  The harvest is still continuing, but volume should get heavy as we get into November.

Potato Loads

Shipments of red potatoes out of North Dakota and Minnesota remain only light to moderate as digging still continues.  The harvest of Red River Valley potatoes is about two to three weeks behind schedule, with a little over half of the spuds now in storage.  Loadings should increase in the weeks ahead.

Sweet Potato Loads

Another late harvest is with North Carolina sweet potatoes.  Some sweet potatoes were being shipped uncured at the start of the season, but now there has been time for curing.  Sweet potatoes are not very sweet or moist when first dug. It takes six to eight weeks of proper curing and storage before they have the sweet, moist taste and texture desired when baked.

Nebraska continues to ship light amounts of potatoes, mostly from the Imperial, Neb area in the southwest part of the state, and from O’Neill in Northeast Nebraska — about 200 loads weekly combined from both areas

There’s also similar volume of potatoes coming out of what’s know as the High Plains district of West Texas, around the Herford area.

Washington state apples – grossing about $6400 to New York City.

North Carolina sweet potatoes – about $1500 to Atlanta. 

 

 

 

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The U.S., including Idaho, ND, Neb. will Have Fewer Potato Loads

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DSCN2133North Dakota potato shipments could be off 22.6 percent this season, according to the North American Potato Market News.  If this holds 5.7 million less hundredweight than in 2012 will be loaded.  Blame is being placed on a cold, wet spring.  Hardest hit are red potatoes for the fresh market and chip crops, with the processing potatoes closer to normal.   Total US potato loads also will be off from last season.

The Red River Valley potatoes from North Dakota and Minnesota is the fourth largest spud shipping region in the country.

If predictions hold, North Dakota harvest acres could  be down nearly 11 percent from last year with the average yield dropping from 300 bags per acre in 2012 down to 260 this year.

In neighboring Minnesota,  it is predicted there will be a 2.7 percent increase in potato shipments, sighting close to ideal weather conditions which should push the average yield up from 400 to 410 hundredweight per acre in the state. 

 Additonally the Market News  sees a 5.4 percent drop in shipments of fall potatoes across the U.S.  North Dakota and Nebraska will have by far the largest drops in shipments on a percentage basis at 22.6% and 18.2% respectively.  However the  largest drop in actual shipments  will occur in Idaho potato shipments projections show a drop of 14.4 million cwt. compared to last year.  Idaho easily leads the nation in potato shipments every year.

 If all the state projections hold true, North Dakota would drop from 4th place down to 6th place in potato shipments in 2013-14 season, and only slightly ahead of Minnesota. 

The USDA will have its fall potato projections out later this month.

Big Lake, MN red potatoes – grossing about $3300 to Atlanta.

Idaho potatoes – grossing about $5500 to New York City.

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Produce Loads: A Look at Shipments Around the Country

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IMG_6550Here’s a look at some produce loading opportunities around the country, as well as what to expect in the next few months.

Vine ripe tomato shipments are crossing the border into the USA from Baja Mexico, plus California mature green tomato loadings are ramping up from Tracy and Newman, CA and other operations in the area.  Tomato loads also are available from Arkansas, South Carolina and Georgia.

California pear shipments got underway last week and are now increasing in volume.  Growers are expected to ship about 4.5 million boxes of fresh-market pears this season. About 2.8 million of those will come from the Sacramento river district, with the lake district accounting for another 1.2 million boxes and Mendocino about 418,000 boxes.

Regarding the extreme heat we’ve been hearing so much about in the West, last weekend the Coachella Valley was apparoaching  120-degrees.  This is bound to adversely affect the tail end of the Coachella grape shipments and very well could end the season a little earlier than planned.  It also means you should be more watchful than usual for quality problems if loading Coachella grapes.

The heat also may adversely affect California vegetables shipments such as eggplant and other items.

In Georgia, steady,  shipments of Vidalia onions will be coming out storages through Labor Day.

The USDA is reporting potato loads could be down for the upcoming fall season as planted acres across the USA are at 1.2 million acres, a drop of 70,700 acres or 6.1 percent.  Idaho has planted 28,000 fewer acres than 2012 and will also harvest 28,000 less acres or a drop of 8.1 percent. Wisconsin acres planted and harvest projections are unchanged from last year at 64,500 and 63,500 respectively.  Washington has planted 160,000 acres or 5,000 less than last year.

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