What's ahead for California table grapes, strawberries and cherries

Scarlet Royal table grapes, like these in the Reedley, Calif., area, as well as other varieties throughout the state, should be available starting in May or June, according to the Fresno-based California Table Grape Commission. Volume should be at least comparable to last year’s crop of about 95 million boxes. Photo: Courtesy of California Table Grape Commission
Scarlet Royal table grapes, like these in the Reedley, Calif., area, as well as other varieties throughout the state, should be available starting in May or June, according to the Fresno-based California Table Grape Commission. Volume should be at least comparable to last year’s crop of about 95 million boxes. Photo: Courtesy of California Table Grape Commission
(Photo courtesy California Table Grape Commission )

California’s table grape, strawberry and cherry industries all seem headed to promising year after a tough growing season characterized by rain, snow and unusually low winter temperatures.

Table grapes

The California table grape season will begin in the Coachella Valley with harvesting estimated to start in mid-to-late May, said Kathleen Nave, president of the Fresno-based California Table Grape Commission.

Harvesting in the San Joaquin Valley should begin in late June or early July. Though the initial season estimate was not available at press time, early expectations are that the 2023 crop will be comparable to or slightly larger than last season’s 95.1 million 19-pound boxes.

Related news: Later start but good quality expected for California tree fruit, melons

Autumn King, Scarlet Royal, Sheegene-20, flame and Sheegene-21 varieties accounted for 47% of the total volume in 2022. Exports accounted for 30% of the volume last season. The top three markets included Canada, Mexico and Taiwan.

“An aggressive marketing campaign is planned for 2023 to increase demand for California table grapes in both domestic and export markets by motivating retailers to move volume throughout the season and motivating primary shoppers to choose California grapes,” Nave said.

Strawberries

The strawberry deal was still headed toward recovery in early April, with shipments much lower than last year.

As of the week ending April 1, California shipments of conventional and organic strawberries totaled 8.5 million trays, down from 20 million at the same time in 2022, according to the Watsonville-based California Strawberry Commission.

Strawberries plants in a field
Rain and cold weather and delayed strawberry picking in the California Central Coast fields of Seven Seas, part of St. Louis-based Tom Lange Co. Inc., says Brent Scattini, vice president, West Coast. “We should hit full stride by the third or fourth week in April,” he says. (Photo courtesy Seven Seas)

Fall-planted acreage for 2023 winter, spring and summer production was 31,852 acres, up from 30,499 in 2022. About 45% of the acreage is in the Watsonville growing region, 34% is in the Santa Maria area and 20% is in Oxnard. Although some acreage was lost due to a levee break along the Pajaro River in March, about 95% of the strawberry crop was undamaged from the storm, said Jeff Cardinale, director of communications for the commission.

That should lead to “an outstanding season for retailers and consumers,” he said.

Cherries

California’s cherry crop will come on seven to 10 days later than usual, with picking beginning in late April or early May, grower-shippers say.

The official crop estimate for 2023 had not been released at press time, but growers project that this year’s crop will be slightly larger than last year’s 5.2 million 18-pound boxes, which is down from about 10 million boxes the year prior, mostly because of an unusually warm winter.

“This year, we got plenty of chill hours,” said Keith Wilson, owner of King Fresh Produce LLC, Dinuba, Calif. Still, some growers reported a light crop because of the rain and cold weather.

Cherries not yet ready for harvest on a tree
California’s cherry crop is expected to be slightly larger than last year’s 5.2 million boxes. Promotable volume should be available by May 20, says Keith Wilson, owner of King Fresh Produce LLC, Dinuba, Calif. (Photo courtesy King Fresh Produce LLC)

“With the varieties we’re growing here, you just never know how the crop is going to set or what weather patterns will be,” said Wilson, who expected promotable volume by May 20.

“We’re going to definitely need to promote,” he said.

There should be ample organic cherries as well, said Maurice Cameron, president of The Flavor Tree Fruit Co. LLC, Hanford, Calif. The company, which he said may be the largest organic cherry producer is California, increased its organic acreage “substantially” this year.

California is the first state to produce cherries each year and should continue to ship until about the third week of June.

 

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