Weather Hits California Cherries as Northwest Growers Begin Harvest

Cherry harvest begins across the Pacific Northwest as growers monitor crop size and fruit quality. However, major weather losses in California may impact supply.

NASHVILLE, TN (RFD NEWS) — Cherry harvest is now underway across parts of the Pacific Northwest as growers continue evaluating this year’s crop size and fruit quality.

Washington State Fruit Commission representative Eric Patrick says growers across several western states are closely monitoring production estimates as harvest activity ramps up.

“We had our five-state meeting last Wednesday. And that represents the five states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Utah, and Montana. It was kind of a two-fold meeting. We’ve got the growers that are represented there in the warehouses. We come up with a number, so, between that, we also do a crop estimation report pretty much weekly that estimates kind of what we’re seeing.”

Current estimates place this year’s crop between 18.4 and 19.2 million boxes, slightly below the five-year average and well under last year’s 23.6 million-box harvest.

Patrick says the smaller crop could still create advantages for growers and retailers.

“So, we put that crop somewhere in the 18.4 to 19.2 million boxes, slightly below the five-year average, but right there, and it’s really a nice promotable number. It’s big enough for retailers throughout the nation and throughout the world to back it up and do good promotions. Sometimes when the crop is that size, too, we see cherries get a little bit bigger. You know, last year we had 23.6 million boxes, and sometimes when you get a little bit smaller crop, that’s when cherries can grow extra size too, so that we might gain some additional tonnage just on the quality of fruit on the tree.”

Harvest is already underway in several states. In California, warmer weather pushed harvest roughly two weeks ahead of last year’s pace.

However, growers are also dealing with significant crop losses after spring heat and rain impacted orchards during the state’s shortened 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
Related Stories
Emily Oberbroeckling says producers in northeast Iowa have made strong planting progress while continuing to monitor moisture conditions.
Jeff Frazier of Scoular discusses the early High Plains canola harvest, acreage growth in Kansas and Oklahoma, and theoutlook for planting and production.
State agriculture leaders say the new “Nine Lakes of East Tennessee” designation could boost tourism and industry investment.
Corn inspections remain strong year-to-date, while China’s soybean and sorghum movement remains important to late-season export demand.
At the center of the announcement is the Blue Point Project in Louisiana, a $3.7 billion ammonia facility, USDA says, that will become the world’s largest ammonia plant once completed.
Southern Plains wheat shippers face higher rail fuel surcharges as hard red winter wheat production falls toward a nearly 70-year low.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Higher placements lifted feedlot inventories, but slower marketings point to continued tightness in finished cattle movement.
China remains critical to U.S. farm exports, but Brazil’s growing market share keeps pressure on U.S. soybean demand.
Tight cattle supplies should keep beef prices supported, while dairy, pork, and poultry are poised for greater production growth.
Early wheat harvest is moving, but rain, drought stress, and disease pressure will determine yield and quality.
China’s pledge is supportive, but producers need confirmed sales and shipments before counting it as stronger export demand.
Higher input costs and tighter cash flow are keeping pressure on farm income, credit needs, and capital spending.
Agriculture Shows
From the rapid technological advances in the business of farming to the policy that helps shape the industry, growers get unparalleled perspective from these guys. Max Armstrong, Mike Pearson and Greg Soulje: the names producers have long known and trusted for agriculture news, weather, and commentary.
Watch Rural Evening News on RFD Network to catch up on that day’s news surrounding agriculture and markets from across the world.
Every day on RFD Network, “Market Day Report” delivers LIVE coverage of agribusiness news, weather, and commodity market information from across the world. Our commodity markets coverage is updated every half hour to bringyou the latest agriculture news.
Farm Monitor shines a light on Southeastern agriculture and is the only weekly news and information program dedicated to Georgia’s largest and most important industry: agriculture.