Today's Pricing

WATERMELON — F.O.B.S AS OF MAY 13

MEXICO CROSSINGS THROUGH NOGALES, ARIZ. — Crossings (705-766-766, seedless 683-751-759, seeded 22-15-7) — Movement expected about the same. Trading seeded slow, others moderate. Prices seedless 35-60 counts lower, others generally unchanged. Red-flesh seedless-type per pound 24-inch bins approximately 35-60 counts mostly 20 cents, 75-80s 14-16 cents; red-flesh seeded-type approximately 35-55 counts 12-14 cents. Flat cartons red-flesh seedless miniature 6-9s $7-9. Quality variable. Many present shipments from prior bookings and/or previous commitments.

LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY, TEXAS — Shipments (29-96-255, seedless 26-83-223, seeded 3-13-32) — Movement expected to decrease slightly. Trading very active at slightly lower prices. Prices 24-inch bins per-pound red-flesh seedless-type approximately 35-60 counts 28 cents, seeded-type approximately 28-35 counts mostly 21-22 cents. Quality generally good. Most present shipments from prior bookings and/or previous commitments at lower prices.

FLORIDA — Shipments (124-159-233, red-flesh seeded 16-29-53, red-flesh seedless 51-130-180) — Movement expected to increase as more growers start the season in central Florida. Harvesting slowed. Trading very active. Prices generally unchanged. 24-inch bins per-pound red-flesh seeded-type 35s 24-25 cents; red-flesh seedless-type 45 count 29-30 cents, 60 count 29-30 cents. Quality generally good.

IMPERIAL AND COACHELLA VALLEYS, CALIF., AND CENTRAL AND WESTERN ARIZONA — Shipments (AZ seedless 0-23-16, CA 0-26-78, seedless 0-24-73, seeded 0-2-5) — Movement from western Arizona, Imperial and Coachella valleys expected to increase seasonally. Trading fairly active at slightly lower prices. Prices slightly lower. Red-flesh seedless-type per pound 24-inch bins approximately 35 and 45 counts mostly 22 cents. Organic red-flesh seedless 24-inch bins per pound approximately 35 and 45 counts 35 cents; miniature carton 6s and 8s $20.50. Quality generally good. Harvest central Arizona expected to begin the week of May 27.



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Opinion

A season of hope

Editor’s note: The following editorial first appeared in The Packer in 1989. It has appeared in every Christmas edition since then.

This is the season of dark, cold and drabness in much of the country. But it also is the season of hope, renewal and joy.

We say joy as opposed to happiness, which one pursues. Joy might be defined as an unexpected moment of happiness.

Joy may appear in this season of snows and winds.

It’s also the season of mists and mysteries: the mystery of spirituality that intrudes for a moment in our world devoted to, in the words of Wordsworth, “getting and spending.”

It’s a season of contrasts and contradictions: bright, colored lights in the darkness, a charitable impulse in a selfish age, God in a stable.

It’s a season of memories and reflection: memories of past Christmases, reflections on another year gone by.

It’s a time for adding up, taking stock, for looking inside and looking ahead.

It’s a season of stories and parables that outlast the flux of headlines and blaring broadcasts.

For those who grow and provide food for the world, the stories and parables are meaningful indeed. People, in fact, are known by the fruits they produce.

The harvest is plentiful but the workers few, and not all seeds take root and flourish.

There truly is a season for all things under heaven. But more than anything else, it is a season of hope.

The days are shortest now, but soon they will lengthen, and seed and plant will stir again to new life.

It was in this season that hope was born into the world.

The remarkable thing is that not even the tinsel and the gush of rampant materialism can drown out that hope.

Good ideas don’t die; they turn up again, even in the midst of winter.


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