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19. Tyson helps food bank, Salvation Army make ends meet
The resulting higher prices for citrus and transportation means less fruit rich in nutrients. While the protein donations means an adequate supply of meat for the near future, a freeze in California last winter destroyed 6 million pounds of fresh citrus that usually makes it to food banks nationwide. Workers scraped together the cash through serving sack lunches at banks, walking tacos at area businesses and lunch at Covenant Medical Center. The Salvation Army will use the extra cash to...
Source

20. Strawberry, corn growers should snap into action as cold returns
Even the strawberry growers who have already covered their crop need to pay attention to the falling temperatures, Poling said in his e-mail messages. With temperatures expected to drop into the freezing range this weekend, local growers need to bundle up their already-planted strawberries and wait on planting anymore corn, experts said Friday. Otherwise, smaller growers and homeowners with gardens can use crop covers, straw, mulch - even newspapers - to help protect plants from the cold,...
SourceVirginian Pilot,VA

21. Agent calls it 'a regional disaster'; only 'a few strawberries ...
The arctic blast that came through the Tennessee Valley over the weekend left a trail of damage that will cost area growers and the local economy millions of dollars. Two successive mornings of below-freezing temperatures made it virtually impossible for area fruit growers to do anything but hope for the best, Morgan County extension agent Mike Reeves said. Easter freeze kills area fruit crop: Agent calls it 'a regional disaster'; only 'a few strawberries' survive. Reeves said strawberry...
SourceThe Decatur Daily,AL

22. Florida's Orange-Juice Yield Rises as USDA Cuts Crop Outlook on ...
Florida's Orange-Juice Yield Rises as USDA Cuts Crop Outlook on Hurricanes 4/10/2007 11:40:00 AM ETRelated symbols: KO PEP Bloomberg Florida's Orange-Juice Yield Rises as Box Count Cut (Update1) By Shruti Date Singh April 10 (Bloomberg) -- Florida will produce more orange juice than previously forecast, even with a smaller crop, because of a higher yield from each box, the U. Florida's Orange-Juice Yield Rises as USDA Cuts Crop Outlook on Hurricanes 4/10/2007 11:40:00 AM ETRelated symbols:...
Source2 hours ago

23. Irvin: N. Georgia peaches, apples wiped out
Fruit and vegetable growers using frost protection will have to wait until the sun comes out to find out if they were able to save any of their crops. Frank Funderburk, an agricultural extension agent in Peach County, the heart of Georgia's peach-growing region, says fruit has shriveled and leaves are turning black. Pecan trees in southeast Georgia that looked to be setting up for a good crop were damaged by the freeze and frost, but growers won t know to what extent until later. Irvin...
SourceAccess North Georgia,GA

24. NZ growers urge Australia to finalise apple import policy
New Zealand apple growers are appealing directly to the senior bureaucrat in Canberra who will decide whether they can export their fruit to Australia. The New Zealanders say that in the absence of any other explanation they can only assume the department head is now using the same delaying tactics that Australian apple growers have used to keep imported apples out since 1921. The growers say they cannot start work on the standard operating procedures and protocols for the trade until the...
SourceRadio New Zealand,New Zealand

25. FARMING orchards survive subfreezing temps fruit weathers the cold
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Source14 hours ago

26. UPDATE Do you like fresh fruit? Well, frost damage may drive up prices (9 a.m. Tuesday)
The weekend cold snap damaged crops across the Southeast and parts of the Midwest, and was especially devastating for fruit growers. Cost estimates for crop damage aren't expected until later in the week, but Georgia's agriculture commissioner is already saying he might ask for federal aid. After the weekend's three days of freezing temperatures, he predicted a total loss on the 3,000 trees in his small, pick-your-own orchard at Harpers Ferry. Advertisement remain available, lovers of...
Source

27. Citrus organization sees benefits of trade agreement
Sparks, the grower organization's executive vice president/chief executive officer, is describing the agreement's possible economic impact as a "new market opportunity for Florida growers at a time when they are still recovering from the financial costs of the 2004-05 hurricanes. Citrus organization sees benefits of trade agreement - Tampa Bay Business Journal: Sparks, the grower organization's executive vice president/chief executive officer, is describing the agreement's possible...
Source

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