By Brian German, Associate
Broadcaster
California produces close to 99
percent of the nation’s pistachios. With harvest season just about wrapped up,
growers are pleased with this year’s crop.
Last year was a slow one for
pistachios, with only 275 million pounds produced. Because pistachios are alternate-bearing [tendency for an entire
tree to produce a greater than average crop one year and a lower than average
crop the following year], last year’s disappointing crop allowed the trees to
rest before producing this year’s estimated record crop.
Richard Matoian, executive
director, American Pistachio Growers, estimated this year’s crop to be between
830 and 850 million pounds. The last record-setting crop was in 2012 when
growers produced 555 million pounds of pistachios. This year, some California growers have reported broken branches
due to the heaviness of the crop, a phenominon Matoian has never seen
before.
Just as last year’s lower harvest
enabled the pistachio trees to bounce back this year, increased rainfall last
winter helped improve irrigation supplies for the nut trees this year.
In addition, more chilling hours
last winter also helped boost production.
Pistachio trees require cold nights, with at least 800 hours of
temperatures below 19 degrees Fahrenheit.
This winter, trees experienced more than 1,000 hours of those
conditions.
Reports indicate that the
pistachio crop from Iran, one of our biggest global competitors, is a bit down
this year, which could help California growers get a better price for their
pistachios. “We all hope and try to
keep the market as strong as it can be,” said Matoian, “but there are market
forces at work. You can’t hold on to a crop forever. You have to be conscious
of what the world supply is, and so a number of factors go into setting a
price.”
Growers are pleased with the
overall size of the harvest compared to last year, but they’re also a bit
concerned about the prices. “The initial price the growers got last year was
somewhere between $2 and about $2.20 per pound. Now we are at a $1.60 to about
$1.80 per pound,” Matoian said.
Source: http://californiaagtoday.com/
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