Southwest Michigan apple production slightly down
Southwest Michigan apple production slightly down
Speaking for the apple crop in southwest Michigan, Barry Winkel, partner and the general manager of Greg Orchards & Produce Inc., located in Benton Harbor, MI, said the crop is down from last year.
“I would suspect the 2013 crop was the largest-ever” in that corner of Michigan, Winkel said. Having back-to-back gigantic crops would be unheard-of, he added.
Barry Winkel, a partner and the general manager of Greg Orchards & Produce Inc., with Marilyn Redder, sales manager, in the firm’s Benton Harbor, MI, packing house.
Some southwest Michigan apple buds were lost to spring frost. “Our Red Delicious are down somewhat,” Winkel said. “We have a good crop of Goldens and our Galas have a good crop.”
In southwest Michigan, “we had more apples than ever last year. This year we are not having a disaster,” Winkel emphasized. “But the Red Delicious here will be down by about a third. The volume is still significant.”
The wintertime cold damage to trees hurt the southwest Michigan peach crop, which started in early August. Apple trees are more tolerant of bitter cold than stone fruit, Winkel added.
Greg Orchards anticipated shipping its first Paula Reds of 2014 in the third week of August. “That’s usually the first variety of any consequence,” he noted. “From there, it continues on.”
Winkel said Greg Orchards ships to customers that are east of the Rocky Mountains. This includes St. Louis, Texas and sometimes Kansas City. “We ship a lot to Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky and Indiana,” Winkel said. “Chicago and Illinois are a given. We are within 500 miles of a lot of people.”
Retailers in the Upper Midwest regularly request photos and biographies of Greg Orchards growers so that information can be posted in the stories to promote “local” production.
Depending on the market situation, Greg Orchards might compete in New York State and Pennsylvania. These states are not only large in population but also in apple production. Growers in those states have a large advantage via lower freight costs, he noted.