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Originally Posted by Magnum_Bob
It's the [bleep], what do you suppose is the % of homemakers today down there that know how to home can tomatoes, green beans or even how to prep and freeze those 2 vegetable's? If I lived down there I'd be filling a pantry full of the best home canned stuff I could working 18+ hrs a day to do it if necessary. MB


That’s the core of the issue. I raise fish, and more than 75% of all fish are eaten in restaurants. Give a yuppie or most millennials a fish or a bushel of crawfish, and they won’t have the knowledge or skills to turn them into food, they are emotionally incapable of doing so.

Until they get hungry..... but I really don’t see that happening. Too many ramen noodles on the shelf yet.


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Originally Posted by IndyCA35
, people still gotta eat. At home. Why aren't the wholesalers channelling this stuff to supermarkets?


People have limited funds, they have to make hard decisions. Hoard toilet paper or eat. LOL



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Originally Posted by JeffA
Originally Posted by kingston


Shame on the USDA for not anticipating this.



LOL, for those that are aware, there is a long term member here that could be working on this. I'm gonna blame him for his lack of reaction......


I’m not the only farmer with little use for the USDA, but I’m not Monsanto, ADM, or Purdue.


Originally Posted by 16penny
If you put Taco Bell sauce in your ramen noodles it tastes just like poverty
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The Cure is destroying many, many more Americans than the disease.

That's a fact.

This shutdown is NOT sustainable.


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Originally Posted by Raeford
Originally Posted by Oldelkhunter
Originally Posted by Raeford
Long Term this is going to be bad, very bad.


Hurricane Andrew gave them a pretty good beating as well and it destroyed land.



I wasn't confining the comment to FL's agriculture alone.



I was commenting on Fl's agriculture as was the OP.

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They couldn't can the beans?


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Originally Posted by JeffA
‘It’s catastrophic.’ Coronavirus forces Florida farmers to scrap food they can’t sell


A tractor with a 35-foot blade mowed down one million pounds of green beans ready to be picked at R.C. Hatton’s Pahokee fields.

Those crops should have been going to South Florida’s restaurants, cruise ships, school cafeterias, airlines and even theme parks.

Instead, they are going into the ground.

“And I’ve got another one million I can’t harvest that’s going down in the next three days,” R.C. Hatton’s president Paul Allen said.

The total shutdown of the hospitality industry, to stem the spread of the coronavirus, means farmers who grew crops intended for everyone from small, independent restaurants to busy hotels are stuck with millions of pounds of produce that will soon be left to die on the vine.

And even food banks, soup kitchens and rescue missions, which have seen a surge of unemployed workers making hours-long lines for boxes of donated fresh fruits and vegetables, are saturated with farm donations.

“It’s catastrophic,” said Tony DiMare, vice president of the third-generation-owned DiMare tomato company. “It’s a dire situation, and there’s no relief in sight.”

Like many farms, DiMare’s business is split between growing produce for retail outlets like grocery stores and direct to the food-service industry.

When restaurants were ordered shut overnight, about half of his 1,300 acres of tomatoes, mostly in Homestead, had no buyers.

“You’re dealing with a perishable product,” DiMare said. “The clock is ticking.”

Unlike flour or sugar, fruits and vegetables must be harvested, boxed, shipped and sold quickly — or not at all.

With no one to buy the product, R.C. Hatton farms has made the difficult decision to plow under many of its fields.

Harvesting that fruit can cost more than twice as much as simply razing it. Workers who usually make between $15-$17 an hour, paid by the amount they pick, instead earn minimum wage doing field work.

So one million pounds of green beans and four million pounds of cabbage at R.C. Hatton will be churned into mulch in the next few days.

[Linked Image from farmflavor.com]
[Linked Image from 3o15h033zmpwracwx2i00rqx-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com]


DiMare estimates that by the end of the growing season, about 10 million pounds of his tomatoes will go unpicked.

“It’s devastating for agriculture in Florida,” Allen said. “There’s zero demand, and it’s being left in the fields.”

[Linked Image from live.staticflickr.com]


One option is for the federal government to invoke the power to purchase farm product for use in assistance programs. The stimulus bill Congress passed Friday had $9.5 billion in dedicated disaster relief for farmers.

Some farms, like Pero Family Farms, have been able to reroute its specialty produce, like sweet mini peppers and organic salads, to the grocery stores who are demanding more than usual because many people are now cooking at home.

And some restaurants have even turned to selling this produce online, with local pick up and delivery. One, Threefold Cafe in Coral Gables, turned their seven-restaurant infrastructure into packaging grocery goods from farms and purveyors and selling it directly to the public.

“We have to find ways to get creative,” said Pero’s chief sales officer, Nick Bergstrom.

Farms are having trouble even giving their fruits and vegetables away.

As millions of pounds of produce threatened to go bad, growers flooded non-profit organizations. DiMare said when Walt Disney World shut its doors, the park filled the food pantries in the Orlando area.

In South Florida, even the biggest non-profits are having trouble moving the mountains of quickly ripening produce into the hands of hungry people who need it.


“The volume is at a level we’ve never seen before,” said Stephen Shelley, president and CEO of Farm Share, which partners with more than 2,000 food pantries, churches, schools and other nonprofits throughout Florida to distribute food every day.

Farm Share is running at maximum capacity, Shelley said, despite having 25 refrigerated trucks, six warehouses of between 10,000-35,000 square feet and 40-50 drop sites from Jacksonville to Florida City. They usually help more than seven million pounds of food reach the hungry and now are faced with moving a lot more.

“It is overwhelming the system,” he said.

But no one is turning away donations. DiMare donated 400,000 pounds of tomatoes last week alone and plans to donate another million pounds this week. R.C. Hatton similarly has opened up its farm to you-pick and is sending countless boxes of green beans and cabbage to food rescue charities, as much as they can take.

“We absolutely can handle it,” said Sari Vatske, executive vice president of Feeding South Florida. “We can’t get it in and out fast enough.”

The organization, which is part of the Feeding America network, is using its own fleet of trucks and more than 220 local partners to give away more than 2.5 million meals a week from Palm Beach to Monroe counties.

Meanwhile, more people than ever are relying on the donated fresh produce as thousands were laid off from the food industry in the last weeks.

Last Wednesday, a line of cars eight miles long queued up at a Farm Share site in Liberty City, where volunteers are putting groceries directly into trunks to avoid unnecessary contact. Distributions are planned throughout the week and a calendar is available online.

Feeding South Florida is seeing six times as many people coming for donations at its many locations, while its volunteer staff is just a quarter of its usual size. Many are following stay-at-home orders and are afraid of contracting the coronavirus, despite a no-contact system.

“The math is not on our side,” Vatske said.

Meanwhile, the sun sets on crops that grow another day closer to going from food to fodder.

“We have got to get this virus contained,” DiMare said, “or we are not going to get back to close to being normal.”



I'm puzzled... confused

Did people quit eating?


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Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”







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Originally Posted by luv2safari
Originally Posted by JeffA
‘It’s catastrophic.’ Coronavirus forces Florida farmers to scrap food they can’t sell


A tractor with a 35-foot blade mowed down one million pounds of green beans ready to be picked at R.C. Hatton’s Pahokee fields.

Those crops should have been going to South Florida’s restaurants, cruise ships, school cafeterias, airlines and even theme parks.

Instead, they are going into the ground.

“And I’ve got another one million I can’t harvest that’s going down in the next three days,” R.C. Hatton’s president Paul Allen said.

The total shutdown of the hospitality industry, to stem the spread of the coronavirus, means farmers who grew crops intended for everyone from small, independent restaurants to busy hotels are stuck with millions of pounds of produce that will soon be left to die on the vine.

And even food banks, soup kitchens and rescue missions, which have seen a surge of unemployed workers making hours-long lines for boxes of donated fresh fruits and vegetables, are saturated with farm donations.

“It’s catastrophic,” said Tony DiMare, vice president of the third-generation-owned DiMare tomato company. “It’s a dire situation, and there’s no relief in sight.”

Like many farms, DiMare’s business is split between growing produce for retail outlets like grocery stores and direct to the food-service industry.

When restaurants were ordered shut overnight, about half of his 1,300 acres of tomatoes, mostly in Homestead, had no buyers.

“You’re dealing with a perishable product,” DiMare said. “The clock is ticking.”

Unlike flour or sugar, fruits and vegetables must be harvested, boxed, shipped and sold quickly — or not at all.

With no one to buy the product, R.C. Hatton farms has made the difficult decision to plow under many of its fields.

Harvesting that fruit can cost more than twice as much as simply razing it. Workers who usually make between $15-$17 an hour, paid by the amount they pick, instead earn minimum wage doing field work.

So one million pounds of green beans and four million pounds of cabbage at R.C. Hatton will be churned into mulch in the next few days.

[Linked Image from farmflavor.com]
[Linked Image from 3o15h033zmpwracwx2i00rqx-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com]


DiMare estimates that by the end of the growing season, about 10 million pounds of his tomatoes will go unpicked.

“It’s devastating for agriculture in Florida,” Allen said. “There’s zero demand, and it’s being left in the fields.”

[Linked Image from live.staticflickr.com]


One option is for the federal government to invoke the power to purchase farm product for use in assistance programs. The stimulus bill Congress passed Friday had $9.5 billion in dedicated disaster relief for farmers.

Some farms, like Pero Family Farms, have been able to reroute its specialty produce, like sweet mini peppers and organic salads, to the grocery stores who are demanding more than usual because many people are now cooking at home.

And some restaurants have even turned to selling this produce online, with local pick up and delivery. One, Threefold Cafe in Coral Gables, turned their seven-restaurant infrastructure into packaging grocery goods from farms and purveyors and selling it directly to the public.

“We have to find ways to get creative,” said Pero’s chief sales officer, Nick Bergstrom.

Farms are having trouble even giving their fruits and vegetables away.

As millions of pounds of produce threatened to go bad, growers flooded non-profit organizations. DiMare said when Walt Disney World shut its doors, the park filled the food pantries in the Orlando area.

In South Florida, even the biggest non-profits are having trouble moving the mountains of quickly ripening produce into the hands of hungry people who need it.


“The volume is at a level we’ve never seen before,” said Stephen Shelley, president and CEO of Farm Share, which partners with more than 2,000 food pantries, churches, schools and other nonprofits throughout Florida to distribute food every day.

Farm Share is running at maximum capacity, Shelley said, despite having 25 refrigerated trucks, six warehouses of between 10,000-35,000 square feet and 40-50 drop sites from Jacksonville to Florida City. They usually help more than seven million pounds of food reach the hungry and now are faced with moving a lot more.

“It is overwhelming the system,” he said.

But no one is turning away donations. DiMare donated 400,000 pounds of tomatoes last week alone and plans to donate another million pounds this week. R.C. Hatton similarly has opened up its farm to you-pick and is sending countless boxes of green beans and cabbage to food rescue charities, as much as they can take.

“We absolutely can handle it,” said Sari Vatske, executive vice president of Feeding South Florida. “We can’t get it in and out fast enough.”

The organization, which is part of the Feeding America network, is using its own fleet of trucks and more than 220 local partners to give away more than 2.5 million meals a week from Palm Beach to Monroe counties.

Meanwhile, more people than ever are relying on the donated fresh produce as thousands were laid off from the food industry in the last weeks.

Last Wednesday, a line of cars eight miles long queued up at a Farm Share site in Liberty City, where volunteers are putting groceries directly into trunks to avoid unnecessary contact. Distributions are planned throughout the week and a calendar is available online.

Feeding South Florida is seeing six times as many people coming for donations at its many locations, while its volunteer staff is just a quarter of its usual size. Many are following stay-at-home orders and are afraid of contracting the coronavirus, despite a no-contact system.

“The math is not on our side,” Vatske said.

Meanwhile, the sun sets on crops that grow another day closer to going from food to fodder.

“We have got to get this virus contained,” DiMare said, “or we are not going to get back to close to being normal.”



I'm puzzled... confused

Did people quit eating?

Maybe they ran the numbers on the stimulus bill handout and fired up the bush hogs .


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We pray for safety, one and all
We pray we may return next fall
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Originally Posted by Dutch
Originally Posted by Magnum_Bob
It's the [bleep], what do you suppose is the % of homemakers today down there that know how to home can tomatoes, green beans or even how to prep and freeze those 2 vegetable's? If I lived down there I'd be filling a pantry full of the best home canned stuff I could working 18+ hrs a day to do it if necessary. MB


That’s the core of the issue. I raise fish, and more than 75% of all fish are eaten in restaurants. Give a yuppie or most millennials a fish or a bushel of crawfish, and they won’t have the knowledge or skills to turn them into food, they are emotionally incapable of doing so.

Until they get hungry..... but I really don’t see that happening. Too many ramen noodles on the shelf yet.

That is an interesting statistic.

The only fish I have ever seen consumed in a dine in setting was battered and deep fried.

Learn something new every day.

But I would not know what to do with those crawdads either, except to put them on a hook to catch a trout or bass.


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Florida sees about 110 million domestic tourist,11 million over seas tourist and about 3.5 million Canadians a season.

The peak of the season is between January and April.
They sent them all home early.
It's the fresh product that 125,000,000 people would have been eating if they were here.

Then there is the schools and restaurants that would be filled with locals stuffin their faces too if they were open, but they are not....

I'd suppose the local canneries are running full production through out the growing season here as always.
Being there is a timely matter involved with harvest and canning there is no way they could ramp up to take all that extra product all at once.

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Originally Posted by Jim_Conrad
They couldn't can the beans?


Cannery is most likely running at 120% capacity trying to resupply the warehouses supplying Kroger and Walmart.

I know that our factories and warehouses are.

Don't those Ramen Noddles originate in China? That supply should be getting short very soon. People will have to rediscover Italian style pasta.


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Originally Posted by Idaho_Shooter
Originally Posted by Dutch
Originally Posted by Magnum_Bob
It's the [bleep], what do you suppose is the % of homemakers today down there that know how to home can tomatoes, green beans or even how to prep and freeze those 2 vegetable's? If I lived down there I'd be filling a pantry full of the best home canned stuff I could working 18+ hrs a day to do it if necessary. MB


That’s the core of the issue. I raise fish, and more than 75% of all fish are eaten in restaurants. Give a yuppie or most millennials a fish or a bushel of crawfish, and they won’t have the knowledge or skills to turn them into food, they are emotionally incapable of doing so.

Until they get hungry..... but I really don’t see that happening. Too many ramen noodles on the shelf yet.

That is an interesting statistic.

The only fish I have ever seen consumed in a dine in setting was battered and deep fried.

Learn something new every day.

But I would not know what to do with those crawdads either, except to put them on a hook to catch a trout or bass.


Give me them crawdads...........and the fish..............I know what to do with them.

I'll take a few head of them cabbages from FL too.

Geno


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In it is contentment
In it is death and all you seek
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Who was it that was talking about a "quick" recovery?????????????????

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Originally Posted by Magnum_Bob
It's the [bleep], what do you suppose is the % of homemakers today down there that know how to home can tomatoes, green beans or even how to prep and freeze those 2 vegetable's? If I lived down there I'd be filling a pantry full of the best home canned stuff I could working 18+ hrs a day to do it if necessary. MB

I ain’t no homemaker, used to be a home builder

I do all the canning now here at the house, plant it, baby it, pick it and can it.

be sweet to get a load of it before it gets turned under

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Very few canneries remain in the US. Google canneries and the number one response is fish canneries. Add the word vegetable to the search, and you begin to get an idea of how few remain. The frozen food business model has overtaken canned produce. Most frozen food companies seldom purchase open market produce. They contract directly with growers to insure sufficient product for their operations. Many US canneries, in the last 25 years, have dissembled and moved to foreign countries.

Here is just one example

https://www.opb.org/news/article/jolly-green-giant-left-town-his-image-remains/


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Just come and get them, Geno, before the eagles eat them all!

Just got the word from one of my retail markets, they are shutting down. Nobody shopping for fresh food. This is going to get ugly if it keeps up.


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This thing is going to kick a lot of people right between the legs.


"...aspire to live quietly, and to mind your own affairs, and to work with your hands, as we instructed you, so that you may walk properly before outsiders and be dependent on no one." - Paul to the church in Thessalonica.

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In our growing area, the piles of good apples discarded by packing sheds, would be a surprise to most. The number one reason the apples are tossed is because they are of a size that will not retail well for a grocery store. Because of cheap imported apple juice, IE Walmart and Kroger store group, very few will ever be processed into juice. These discarded apples often end up as cow food at a dairy. A real waste because of finicky consumer behaviors.


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Originally Posted by Lennie
In our growing area, the piles of good apples discarded by packing sheds, would be a surprise to most. The number one reason the apples are tossed is because they are of a size that will not retail well for a grocery store. Because of cheap imported apple juice, IE Walmart and Kroger store group, very few will ever be processed into juice. These discarded apples often end up as cow food at a dairy. A real waste because of finicky consumer behaviors.


From 2009 ;
Crooked cucumbers and co. make a European comeback
Crooked cucumbers, knobbly carrots and other strangely shaped fruit and vegetables - the stuff of EU myth, legend and ridicule is set to return to the shelves of European supermarkets.


An oddly shaped cucumber
Coming soon to European supermarkets

It's been the most popular joke about EU overregulation: desk-bound European Commission bureaucrats sitting in Brussels with nothing better to do than regulating the shapes and sizes of fruit and vegetables.

Until now, the EU only granted space on supermarket shelves for norm-fitting vegetables or fruit, but starting July 1, strange shapes and sizes are allowed back.

Fruit stand at a market
Desk-bound Brussels bureaucrats say a plum is a plum regardless of its shape

"July 1 marks the return to our shelves of the curved cucumber and the knobbly carrot," EU Agriculture Commissioner Mariann Fischer Boel said.

"It makes no sense to throw away perfectly good products, just because they are the 'wrong' size and shape," she added.

20 years of strict rules on cucumber's curvature

But for the last twenty years, the EU has been throwing away "perfectly good products," with strict regulations that divided fruit and vegetables into classes depending not only on their quality but also appearance.

The criteria included, for instance, the degree of curvature of cucumbers and the smoothness of carrots.

The idea behind the legislation was to make it easier for EU consumers to compare products, but the regulation ended up becoming the most popular jibe at EU micro-regulation and bureaucracy overkill.

Last November, the 27 EU nations gave the green light for lifting the regulation. In all, standards for 26 fruits and vegetables are being scrapped, including apricots, eggplant, cherries, garlic, melons, and spinach.

"This is a concrete example of our drive to cut unnecessary red tape. We don't need to regulate this sort of thing at the EU level," Boel said.

Standards remain for 10 products

Standards are, however, kept in place for 10 products, including some of the most popular in European kitchens: apples, citrus fruit, kiwi, lettuce, peaches and nectarines, pears, strawberries, sweet peppers, grapes and tomatoes.

Apple, orange, strawberry, kiwi, pear, grapes
Ten products remain under the EU regulation

Those ten account for three quarters of the value of the EU's fruit-and-vegetables trade and will still have to conform to standard shape and size and pass some visual tests before they're sent off to the supermarkets.

Nevertheless, even these ten can dodge Brussels' watchful eye if they are sold with an appropriate label, alarming the consumer about their shortcomings in terms of shape and size.

"In other words, the new rules will allow national authorities to permit the sale of all fruit and vegetables, regardless of their size and shape," the EU Commission said in a statement.


We pray our sights be straight
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We pray for no pain
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We thank you Lord
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We thank you for the sights
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We pray for safety, one and all
We pray we may return next fall
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I was getting those apples for 20 bucks a 1000 lb tote in the early 90's and running them to my place in Montana where we would grind/press them and turn them into juice. I was up to a few thousand gallons a year out of the back yard until the 1996 Odwalla E. coli outbreak. Local health department came down on me like stink on schit, I had every health food store and farmers market covered for a long ways around......

My local deer loved me, when they'd hear the grinder fire up they came in droves....

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