Posted on 04/14/2014 2:15:46 PM PDT by zeestephen
Florida, the source of the majority of oranges used to make orange juice in the U.S., experienced an unusually cold winter, plus a fruit disease. Groves in Brazil, the world's largest orange exporter, are experiencing the worst drought in decades.
(Excerpt) Read more at money.msn.com ...
Can’t drink OJ. It gives me sores on my gums.
Natalies Orchid Island! Or Hale
PS: Most Florida citrus is owned and run by Brazilian companies.
Natalie’s is a fine company.
We had a Lawson’s almost next door where I grew up. OJ & milk in the returnable half-gallon jugs, chip-chop ham [and laster, roast beef] and the ice cream, too. Handy place for a growin’ boy. Ah, memories!
Same here in Orlando.
I had not realized the Brazilians were so involved in Florida citrus.
I lived in Florida from 1950 to 1985.
The orange crop was ALWAYS just a few years away from total destruction, either by canker, fruit flies, drought, or record cold temperatures.
Lesson learned?
Being a farmer sucks, even in the sub-tropics.
In the 1970’s we had a terrible blight that wiped out millions of coconut palm trees.
Have they ever grown back?
The local boutique markets sell fresh-squeezed made from Southern California navels. Runs about $10 a quart (!), but what a special treat.
Read it and weep: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/citrus-greening-bacteria-devastating-world-s-orange-crop-1.2465887
The millions of trees that died were landscaping.
We lost like four trees at our house, and another six at my Father's hotel.
For a couple years Broward County looked like it had been clear cut by an insane logging company.
The blight was called "Lethal Yellowing."
There are probably old pictures on the Internet.
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