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PowerPoint Presentation Michigan Cherry

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Cherry Growing conditions. Winter hardiness similar to apples ... sweet cherries, peaches, blueberries, grapes, strawberries, pears and plums. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Michigan Cherry


1
Michigan Cherries
2
Michigan Cherry History
  • Peter Dougherty, a Presbyterian missionary, is
    credited with planting the first cherry orchard
    and founding the cherry industry as a commercial
    enterprise in the Midwest.
  • Against the advice of local Indians who had grown
    other fruits in the area, Dougherty planted a
    cherry orchard in 1852 on the Old Mission
    Peninsula, a narrow strip of land that juts into
    Grand Traverse Bay near Traverse City, Michigan.
  • Today issues are about farm preservation against
    sprawl

3
Cherry Growing conditions
Which crops like which soils? Clay-wheat,
timothy, bluegrass Silt loam-corn, apple Loam-red
clover, alfalfa, field beans Sandy soils-potato,
field peas, turnip, barley, rye, peach,
cherry Calcareous- white clover Muck soils-
celery, cabbage, lettuce, onions
  • Winter hardiness similar to apples
  • Trees flower early in spring and highly
    susceptible to spring frost damage
  • Cherry type soils
  • Sweet
  • Eastern U.S. - Sandy soil, hilly terrain for
    frost protection, preferred growing on east side
    of large body of water.
  • Western U.S. - Rich, volcanic soil, hot days,
    cold nights, preferred growing in shadow of
    mountain ranges.
  • Tart
  • Sandy soil, hilly terrain for frost protection,
  • preferred growing on east side of large body of
    water.

4
Kinds of Cherries Michigan's cherries are
predominantly the tart varieties.
  • Two kinds of cherries
  • Sweet (larger and often darker, as Bing)
  • eaten raw by the handful
  • grown mostly in California and the Pacific
    Northwest
  • tart "sour," cherries, (the smaller Montmorency
    and Morello),
  • canned, frozen, juiced and made into jams,
    jellies and pastry and pie fillings.

5
Sweet CherriesPrunus avium
  • Most of Michigan's sweet cherries are turned into
    maraschino cherries. Maraschino, by the way,
    comes from the Italian word for a pungent liqueur
    - distilled in Croatia and Italy from a bitter
    Dalmationa wild cherry called the "marasca" - in
    which cultivated cherries were once steeped until
    appropriately fortified. Today, commercial
    maraschinos owe their fiery glow to food
    coloring.
  • The majority of Michigan's sweet cherry crop is
    processed. The main product made with sweets is
    maraschino cherries.

6
Sweet cherry crop 2002
  • The Pacific states are the primary producers of
    sweet cherries but Michigan still ranks in the
    top four, producing about 20 percent of the
    annual crop.
  • Sweet cherries are failing, with the state
    projected to produce 4 million pounds vs. an
    average of 50 million pounds.
  • Sweet cherries were hard hit by April's Arctic
    winds, May freezes and later heat during
    pollination, which denuded fruit statewide.

7
Tartsour cherry pie cherry tart cherry red
cherry
  • Sour cherries don't transport well, so they're
    difficult to find fresh. They generally are
    canned or frozen shortly after harvesting. Canned
    sour cherries, though, are almost as good.
  • The main variety of tart cherries is called the
    Montmorency. It has been in the U.S. for more
    than a century because it is best for pies,
    preserves, jellies, juice and other products.

Prunus cerasus
8
  • Average tree has 7,000 tart cherries
  • About twenty-eight pies worth

9
Tart acreage
Northwest Michigan - the nation's No. 1 tart
cherry region
  • There are 36,000 acres of tart cherry trees in
    Michigan about 55,000 acres nationwide
  • The Grand Traverse Region produces over 50
    percent of Michigan's annual tart cherry crop, or
    about 100 to 120 million pounds.

10
June 2002"At this point in the season, you'd
expect to see a red hue to the orchard, and all
you see is green."
  • The region's 320-some tart cherry farms are
    facing the worst year in the industry's recorded
    history.

11
2002 Crop
  • Michigan expects to harvest a tart cherry crop of
    less than 15 million pounds, down 95 percent from
    last year. Spring frosts with prolonged
    temperatures below freezing greatly damaged the
    crop.
  • That compares to 183 million pounds last year.
  • This year's is the smallest cherry crop since the
    Michigan Department of Agriculture began keeping
    records in 1925.

12
Economic impact
  • Some 120 million pounds of stored cherries, many
    from last year's overabundant crop, will be
    released to the market, providing some income to
    growers and processors.
  • Last year, growers were paid about 20 cents per
    pound. They pay processors about 9 cents per
    pound annually for surplus storage.

13
Economic impact
  • Farmers still must pay this year for orchard
    upkeep.
  • The average 100-acre farm pays about 30,000 per
    year for pesticides and fertilizers, 7,500 to
    replant old growth, and carries about 150,000 in
    farm equipment debt.

14
Economic Impact30 million loss
  • Labor crews aren't going to be hired. They're not
    going to be buying equipment. They're not going
    to be buying supplies. All the labor that's used
    to harvest crops, they're not going to buy
    groceries.

15
  • The nation annually consumes about 200 million
    pounds of tart cherries.

16
  • Utah, the nation's second leading tart cherry
    producer, also is facing crop failure.

17
  • Climate is very important which is why Michigan
    orchards are located primarily along the Lake
    Michigan shoreline. Lake Michigan tempers the
    Arctic winds in winter and cools the orchards in
    summer.

18
Climate
  • Bodies of water such as lakes are quite helpful
    in modifying temperatures and reducing crop
    damage, especially when located on the north and
    northwest sides of orchards.
  • The Great Lakes are well known for their
    beneficial effects on protecting fruits grown
    along the southwest coastal area of Michigan.

19
Processing
  • Both tart cherries and sweet cherries ripen in
    July, and peak harvest time is usually the third
    week of July. Most tart cherries are
    mechanically harvested, using a shaker to drop
    the fruit onto canvasses where they are placed in
    tanks of water.
  • Sweet cherries that are to be marketed fresh are
    picked by hand.

20
Medical claims
  • Michigan State University has found cherries to
    be an excellent source of compounds with
    antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.
  • They have been shown to help prevent
  • cancer cardiovascular disease
  • Alleged to reduce the pain associated with
    arthritis and gout
  • antioxidants may slow the aging process.
  • Tart cherries also contain natural
    anti-inflammatory compounds, which laboratory
    tests indicate are at least ten times more active
    than aspirin. Further, tart cherry components are
    suspected to have the ability to inhibit the
    enzymes that ultimately cause joint pain.

21
Cherry festival
  • Cherry season is celebrated in Michigan with the
    well-known Traverse City Cherry Festival, held
    every July and attended by some 500,000 visitors
    over eight days.

22
Michigan applesthe 1 fruitWinter hardy to
-40F.
  • Michigan produced about 1.4 billion pounds of
    fruit in 2000 including apples, tart cherries,
    sweet cherries, peaches, blueberries, grapes,
    strawberries, pears and plums.
  • More than 60 percent of that amount was apples,
    which totaled 850 million pounds.
  • Apple volume alone equals more than the volume of
    all the other fruits combined.
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