News
The rain has hit in most areas of California and, as a result, PTAB projections have changed. Following is the most current and up to date information for week ending 24 September.


According to an interview by KOVR/CNN with a farmer who grows tomato in the region of Stockton, a lot of farmers have turned this year to almonds and walnuts, leaving less water for tomatoes, considering that “having enough water for that crop only, permanent crop like walnuts [is] the crop you’re going to take care of.”
Some of them are in the middle of their tomato harvest and they now face a different water issue: too much rain at the wrong harvest time. “It creates mold. Mold is what the cannery doesn’t want,” the tomato grower whose family has been farming in California for more than 150 years said.
With storm clouds threatening the harvest, it’s a race against time. If the tomatoes turn, that means trouble for the farmer. “They start sending the trucks back loaded. They come back, and you have to dump them. And that’s it. Normally you don’t harvest anymore tomatoes, because the whole field gets mold,” the grower said.
Wet weather also slows the harvesting process. “If the ground gets wet, you can’t get in and you don’t get as much done because of the mud in the machine”.
According to local press, the rotten turn of events could impact millions of tons of tomatoes, which are used to make pasta sauces. Less sauce on the shelves means more money consumers might have to spend. “They tell me the warehouses are empty, so that means when you go to the store and you want to buy tomato sauce for spaghetti and there are only a few cans on there, you say, ‘I better buy a couple extra ones,’” the grower said.
There is crop insurance, but grower says don’t bank on it, adding that “this year, it will be hard to catch up given the ever-rising price of doing business due to inflation.”
Sources: PTAB, KOVR via CNN Newsource


























