Farm Progress

Wine grapes a force in Central Valley

While milk is still king of the crops at $1.2 billion in value, grapes are second in San Joaquin County’s top 10 crops and near the top 10 in Stanislaus County.

July 5, 2013

1 Min Read

Winegrapes grown in the Central Valley have an agricultural value of more than $345 million which contributes to the $5.4 billion of overall value for crops grown in the region.

While milk is still king of the crops at $1.2 billion in value, grapes are second in San Joaquin County’s top 10 crops and near the top 10 in Stanislaus County, according to the most recent crop reports issued by the agricultural commissioners offices in both counties.

However, grapes weren’t always this successful: in the past 15 years a grape glut, due to over planting, contributed to a winegrape malaise. Among the causes were lower prices, imported chardonnay by wineries which hurt local chardonnay producers and hammered the domestic market, growers having to custom crush or take what wineries offered at the crusher, and inconsistent contracts.

For more, see: Wine grapes strong, potential replacement crops also moneymakers in Central Valley

 

More from Western Farm Press

Marijuana farming's crushing environmental impact in California

DIY biotech a glowing minefield for USDA

Growing fish in the Arizona desert?

Oregon GMO mystery wheat is a whodunit

Meteorite find a golden harvest for farmer

What a grocery store without honey bees looks like

Wine grape drone flying over California vineyards

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like