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Peaches in short supply this year due to weather pitfalls in Midwest and South

Warm weather in the South and cold weather in the Midwest has affected the US peach crop this year. It’s been a hard year for the fruit, not only in southern Illinois, but in the big peach-producing states of Georgia and South Carolina as well. While cold weather affected the peach crop in Illinois, warm weather affected the southeast; all of this is leading to a national shortage.

Kay Rentzel, the executive director of the National Peach Council, said losing peaches from the South certainly has an impact: “With such a significant number and volume of fresh peaches coming out of Georgia and South Carolina in any typical year, it does make a big difference to the marketplace and the availability of fresh peaches.”

Georgia’s production in 2023 is down 90-95% of the state’s usual numbers, and South Carolina’s will be down 60-70%, Ms Rentzel said.

Duke Lane III, farmer and president of Georgia’s Peach Council, said this year was the worst for the state since 1955: “It’s devastating for all the people that are involved in that — from the farms to the employees to the transportation companies and, obviously, our retail partners,” Lane III said. “It’s a pretty big ripple effect when the Georgia peach doesn’t really have much of a crop.”

Source: kcur.org

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