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  • Environment
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Drought Blamed For Drop In Cherry Harvest

  •  Rich Ibarra 
Monday, June 30, 2014 | Sacramento, CA
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** RCB ** / Flickr
 

** RCB ** / Flickr

The California cherry crop this year was paltry compared to most years. Some orchards went unpicked because there was so little fruit.

A normal year sees about 12 million boxes of cherries picked in California. This year only 2.5 million boxes were harvested, which represents about a 75 percent drop.

San Joaquin County accounts for about 60 percent of the cherry harvest in the state. 

Tom Gotelli of O-G Packing in Stockton, which grows and packs cherries says warm days in December, January, and February were to blame. 

"No fog and no rain, the trees didn't know what to do, we have to have so many hours under 45 degrees and we think certainly when you have high temperatures it messes up the whole mechanism of the tree," says Gotelli.

According to the California Cherry Board the cherry crop is normally valued at over $200 million but this year it will fall well short of that figure. 


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    More about drought

  • State Of Drought

    Reservoir levels are at historic lows, municipalities are ordering mandatory conservation and farmers are bracing for water shortages. CapRadio is following how Californians are being impacted by the drought.

 droughtstocktoncaliforniawatersan joaquin countycherryCalifornia Cherry Board

Rich Ibarra

Contributing Central Valley/Foothills Reporter

As the Central Valley correspondent, Rich Ibarra covers San Joaquin, Stanislaus, and Merced counties, along with the foothill areas including Tuolumne and Calaveras counties. He covers politics, the economy and issues affecting the region.   Read Full Bio 

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