The quest to keep juice grapes profitable

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asked Mar 17, 2022 in 3D Segmentation by freeamfva (39,060 points)

Washington produces more juice grapes than any other state in the nation, fueling the building blocks for not just juice, but also jelly, fruit leather and syrup.To get more news about pomegranate seed remover, you can visit hl-juicer.com official website.

Despite sitting atop the U.S. supply, the state acreage of juice grapes has declined slightly in the past several years. People aren’t buying juice as often as they did, as more consumers worry about the sugar content of the naturally-grown product that’s also rich in vitamins C and K.

It’s put “global pressure on the juice grape industry,” said Trent Ball, Yakima Valley College agriculture department chairman.

In the mid-2000s, Washington had about 25,000 acres of land dedicated to juice grapes, compared to about 21,000 acres today, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Concords are still the heavily dominant juice grape grown, with only about 1,000 acres of the overall total dedicated to Niagaras. Concord grapes are a dark bluish-purplish color, creating a dark purple or dark red juice. The Niagara variety is a green grape and may be used for white grape juice.

Washington has shifted focus to other commodities along the way, which once led to a growth in the production of hops and tree fruit. But not all crops can grow in the same spot where juice grapes once did. For example, Concord grapes are more tolerant of cold temperatures so can’t be replaced with wine grapes in every location.
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The Yakima Valley still has a hold on the majority of the juice grapes grown in Washington, though a small amount also is produced in spots near the Snake River. The yearly crop can result in about 200,000 tons, though it’s a cyclical fruit with high-bearing years followed by low-bearing years. The 10-year average for state production is about 185,000 tons annually.

Dick Boushey has been growing juice grapes for Welch’s since 1980. He planted wine grapes at the same time as Concords, which allowed him to “watch both industries develop in different directions.”

Boushey described juice grapes as a “steady eddy” crop where returns are low, but don’t require a high cost per acre to grow. The biggest challenge tends to be keeping juice grapes profitable.

With wine grapes, “There’s a lot more detail and more particular pruning. I don’t make nearly as much on juice grapes,” Boushey said.Sunnyside grower Ryan Schilperoort described being “late to the party” when he bought his first mechanical pruner a few years ago. He had been hand-pruning until then, but increases in minimum wage and labor shortages made it more cost effective to replace people with machines.

“Even though juice grapes and wine grapes look similar when growing, that’s really the end of the similarity,” said Vicky Sharlau, executive director of the Washington Winegrowers Association.The fruit itself might look similar, but the vines are quite different. With wine grapes, the fruit tends to grow upward, with the fruit exposed to the sun. Juice grapes hang down and have a large canopy, hiding the fruit.

The reliability of growing juice grapes tends to make the product naturally organic without the official label. Boushey said he primarily uses water and fertilizer on his crops.Schilperoort might use herbicides for weed control, but that’s about it, he said.

Concords often don’t need fungicides, pesticides or insecticides. To know when it’s time to pick, farmers test the fruit for its sugar content, usually looking for a value of 16 degrees Brix. The Brix scale measures the density of sugar in a solution.

Once harvested, juice grapes are sold either through a contract price or a cash price. The most recent values from 2016 were up $10 a ton from the prior year, to $120. But it’s still far from the surge in demand seen for the crop in 2012, which raised the cash price to $280 a ton. The biggest buyers of Washington juice grapes are Welch’s, Smucker’s, Milne Fruit, Tree Top, FruitSmart and Valley Processing.

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