Posts Tagged “spring vegetables”

Salinas Valley Shipments May be Down Some this Year

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Following a cold and rainy winter playing havoc with crop plantings and growth, spring vegetables and berries are taking off from California’s Salinas Valley with big volume in the weeks ahead.

Coastline Family Farms of Salinas, CA has wrapped up desert vegetable shipments such as broccoli, cauliflower, lettuces and herbs from Brawley, CA. Now the company is focusing on spring loadings from the Central Coast.

Salinas broccoli and cauliflower shipments are underway and moving into good volume.

Salad Savoy Corp., of Salinas, had nearly a week of planting delays in December. The company grows kale, chard and cauliflower in Yuma, AZ during the winter and in Soledad, CA in the spring.

Berry Shipments

Naturipe Berry Growers of Salinas grows mostly strawberries on 1,300 around Salinas, plus other places in California and Mexico.

Rains in California resulted in virtually nothing being harvested early in the season for strawberries, but more favorable weather has harvest and shipments back on track. Volume has been good leading up to Mother’s Day set for May 12th.

Recent seasons has seen record setting California strawberry shipments, but this year volume is expected to be down a little.

Naturipe is expecting more normal shipments this season averaging around 8,000 to 10,000 trays an acre.

Salina Valley vegetables and Watsonville berries – grossing about $4800 to Chicago.

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Salinas Spring Vegetable Shipments off to Slow Start Due to Weather

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Fewer shipments of spring vegetables this season and a delay in volume loadings is occurring in a key California growing region, the Salinas Valley.

Frequent and excessive rainfall are prime culprits.

At Pacific International Marketing of Salinas, plantings were interrupted in January and February. The disruptions in normal, consistent plant schedules for the early season is making forecasts challenging regarding yields and total volume.

 

Winter production challenges from the deserts of California and Arizona and Mexico has made the seasonal transition to Salinas more difficult to predict as well.

Ocean Mist Farms in Castroville, CA reports winter rainfall in the Salinas area was has been about 130 percent above normal. This has resulted in some vegetable crops such as broccoli and cauliflower maturing slowly, with uneven growth. .

Duda Farm Fresh Foods of Salinas notes rains prevented farms from conducting necessary cultural practices, such as applying fertilizer.. Planting schedules also could throw off harvest and shipping schedules since multiple plantings were being done in one week during the breaks in weather rather than planting over several weeks

Salad Savoy Corp. of Salinas reports delays in planting have been one to two weeks depending on the crops.

Salinas vegetables – grossing about $4400 to Chicago.

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