Today's Pricing

WATERMELON — F.O.B.S AS OF MAY 21

ALL FLORIDA DISTRICTS — Shipments (837-849-1,015 (red-flesh seedless 669-694-876; red-flesh seeded 168-155-139) —

CENTRAL AND SOUTH FLORIDA — Movement expected to increase. Shortage of availability of trucks. Most growers have finished in south Florida. Trading active. Prices higher. 24-inch bins per cwt. red-flesh seeded 35s $14; red-flesh seedless-type 36s $19, 45s $19, 60s $19.

NORTH FLORIDA — Movement expected to increase. Shortage of availability of trucks. Trading active. Prices higher. 24-inch bins per cwt. red-flesh seeded 35s $14-15; red-flesh seedless-type 36s $20-21, 45s $21-22, 60s $21-22. Quality generally good.

MEXICO CROSSINGS THROUGH NOGALES, ARIZ. — Crossings (489-615-616, seedless 466-588-598, seeded 23-27-18) — Movement expected about the same. Trading early fairly slow, late slow. Prices lower. Red-flesh seedless-type per-pound 24-inch bins approximately 35, 45 and 60 counts 12-14 cents, 75-80s mostly 5 cents. Quality and condition variable.

SOUTH TEXAS — Shipments (48-164-438, seedless 40-141-385, seeded 8-23-53) — Movement expected to increase because of increased retail demand for Memorial Day. Trading early moderate, late fairly active. Prices seeded slightly higher, seedless generally unchanged. Red-flesh seedless-type per-pound 24-inch bins approximately 35, 45 and 60 counts mostly 19-20 cents; cartons 4-6s mostly 21-22 cents. Red-flesh seeded-type per-pound 24-inch bins approximately 28 and 35 counts 15-16 cents. Quality generally good. Shipments and prices include Lower Rio Grande Valley.

IMPERIAL AND COACHELLA VALLEYS, CALIF., AND CENTRAL AND WESTERN ARIZONA — Shipments (CA 0-48-148, seedless 0-39-125, seeded 0-9-23; AZ 7-16-41, seedless 7-16-41, seeded 0-0-0) — Movement expected to increase seasonally in California and western Arizona. Trading active at lower prices. Prices lower. 24-inch bins per-pound red-flesh seedless-type approximately 35 and 45 counts mostly 18 cents, approximately 60 count 16-18 cents; red-flesh seeded-type approximately 35 and 45 counts 14-16 cents. Quality generally good. Central Arizona harvest expected to begin late in the week of May 28.

MEXICO CROSSINGS THROUGH TEXAS — Crossings (116-96-55) — Movement expected to decrease seasonally. Trading early moderate, late fairly active. Prices generally unchanged. Red-flesh seedless-type per-pound 24-inch bins approximately 35, 45 and 60 counts mostly 19-20 cents. Quality variable.



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News

Retailers warm to asian pears

Don SchrackJillian Diepersloot, special projects coordinator at Kingsburg Orchards, Kingsburg, Calif., holds a just picked tote of Crunch Gold Asian pears, the company’s popular proprietary variety. KINGSBURG, Calif. — More and more consumers are becoming asian pear buyers, grower-shippers said.

The credit goes as much to retailers as to the quality of the fruit, they said.

“The retailers are really working well in promoting and adding shelf space,” said John Hein, salesman for Trinity Fruit Sales Co., Fresno.

It’s a view shared by Kingsburg Orchards.

“They’re (the pears) becoming more of a main street item that retailers are willing to promote in the apple and pear category,” said Dan Spain, vice president of sales and marketing.

The company’s proprietary Crunchy Gold launched the 2011 asian pear — or as the company markets them, apple pear — season in late July for Kingsburg Orchards.

“It’s a very good crop, and it’s moving well and fetching good prices,” Spain said in early August.
Crunchy Golds and hosuis will be available into late September, he said.

Harvesting of hosuis began in early August for most other California grower-shippers.

“We’re getting nice sized fruit, not a huge crop but excellent quality,” said Doug Phillips, owner of Phillips Farms Marketing, Visalia.

The early hosui harvest for Trinity Fruit Sales was producing a good range of sizes, Hein said, from 10s and 12s down to 18s. The sizes are dictated by the thinning process and are farmed to accommodate the programs Trinity Sales has in place, he said.

“We do lots of custom packing for everything from club packs to clamshells to single-layer and two-layer cartons,” Hein said.

The hosui harvest will wrap up by the end of September, grower-shippers said, but will overlap with the shinko harvest, which should begin in early to mid-September. Asian pears will be available into next year from all three growers.

Mexico had become a growing export market for the fruit until the flap over Mexican trucks’ entering the U.S. resulted in retaliatory tariff increases, Phillips said.

“I’m excited that Mexico is opening up again,” he said.

“With the somewhat favorable exchange rates, I think we’re going to get that business back.”


 

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