NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD NEWS) — California cherry growers are facing major crop losses after spring heat and rain hit orchards during a short harvest window. The California Farm Bureau reports San Joaquin County lost 63 percent of its cherry crop, with estimated losses of $174 million.
The damage started with an early heat wave that hurt fruit set in several orchards. Then April and May storms caused splitting, decay, and shorter shelf life as the fruit matured.
Statewide production is now expected to be below 5 million 18-pound boxes, compared with a recent five-year average of 8 million boxes. California is the nation’s second-largest cherry-producing state behind Washington.
The quality problem is also an export problem. California cherries rely heavily on the fresh market, and premium fruit normally moves to buyers in Canada, South Korea, and Japan.
Several counties are reviewing disaster declarations, while crop insurance may help growers cover some costs.
Farm-Level Takeaway: Weather losses are cutting California cherry volume, reducing export-quality fruit and creating another difficult year for growers.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
Congressman Mark Messmer discusses the Farm Bill, rural investment priorities, Prop 12, and support for farmers facing economic pressure.
Trade officials discussed export growth, biofuel opportunities and market access during the National Restaurant Association Show.
Community Supported Agriculture programs continue helping farms secure early-season funding while connecting consumers with local food.
Cattle markets continue supporting rural land values, but lenders say repayment rates and carryover debt are becoming a larger focus.
Analysts say drought, tight cattle supplies and summer grilling demand continue shaping the protein market outlook.
CECU President and CEO Jason Altmire discusses rural workforce shortages, technical skills, and why hands-on labor remains critical despite AI growth.