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highplainsdem

(63,103 posts)
Thu May 7, 2026, 01:48 PM May 7

California farmers to destroy 420,000 peach trees after Del Monte collapses

Source: Independent

Central California peach farmers are preparing to destroy around 420,000 clingstone peach trees after Del Monte Foods shut down its canneries earlier this year.

Del Monte, the 139-year-old canned fruit and vegetable company, permanently closed its canneries in Modesto and Hughson in April following a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing last July.

The closures left hundreds of workers without jobs and devastated growers, many of whom lost 20-year contracts with Del Monte and had few alternative buyers for their crops. Farmers could face an estimated $550 million in lost revenue, according to the Sacramento Bee.

In response, Senator Adam Schiff and Reps. Mike Thompson and David Valadao announced last week that affected growers could receive up to $9 million in federal aid to remove up to 420,000 clingstone peach trees before the upcoming harvest season, which typically runs from late May through September.

-snip-

Read more: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/california-peach-trees-destroyed-del-monte-closure-b2972246.html



Better yet, some of our useless billionaires could step in to save those trees and farmers and farm workers, and get that food to schools and food pantries.
27 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
California farmers to destroy 420,000 peach trees after Del Monte collapses (Original Post) highplainsdem May 7 OP
I had better not see imported canned peaches on store shelves. Diamond_Dog May 7 #1
don't look. maxsolomon May 7 #18
I grew up in the Central Valley.............this is really sad I really like DeL Monte fruits and vegetables.......... turbinetree May 7 #2
Replacing them with other crops pfitz59 May 7 #3
Not years, but expensive Brother Buzz May 7 #22
for peach lovers pfitz59 May 7 #4
" up to $9 million in federal aid to remove up to 420,000" productive trees Norrrm May 7 #5
Surprised RoseTrellis May 8 #25
Is that offer due to water? Teacher of the Year May 7 #6
This EuterpeThelo May 7 #7
$550 million in revenue is a massive amount of peaches lostnfound May 7 #8
More deforesation Marthe48 May 7 #9
Sounds like a intelligent solution to me. electric_blue68 May 7 #19
Del Monte, the 139-year-old ... Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The old CASH out and pay no one. Bastids dave99 May 7 #10
Don't hold your breath blue-wave May 7 #11
"Billionaires step in to save" is not part of any true statement in English. nt hvn_nbr_2 May 7 #15
I wish I lived in a world where your suggestion was law. NNadir May 7 #12
Really sad. senseandsensibility May 7 #13
It just sounds crazy! eom Exp May 7 #14
Peach trees are not always easy to maintain. ... littlemissmartypants May 7 #16
I need somebody to explain why we would pay Buddyzbuddy May 7 #17
I agree, for all their anti govt talk they totally rely on the govt JI7 May 7 #23
The loss of nearly half a million tress! That gets me. electric_blue68 May 7 #20
Kick dalton99a May 7 #21
Why do I smell housing developers? jmowreader May 7 #24
Same here. hunter May 8 #27
Billionaires doing good works? Not likely. travelingthrulife May 8 #26

turbinetree

(27,735 posts)
2. I grew up in the Central Valley.............this is really sad I really like DeL Monte fruits and vegetables..........
Thu May 7, 2026, 02:13 PM
May 7

Brother Buzz

(40,409 posts)
22. Not years, but expensive
Thu May 7, 2026, 05:41 PM
May 7

I live in stone fruit country and witnessed many orchards yanked out and replaced with row crops.

The trees limbs are ground up and used in the wood pulp industry, trunks are bulldozed up and piled up to be burned in place, then they rip the soil to bring up the roots and cleared by hand. This all happens in the winter and is ready for spring planting.

Norrrm

(5,590 posts)
5. " up to $9 million in federal aid to remove up to 420,000" productive trees
Thu May 7, 2026, 02:46 PM
May 7

The Trump/republican economy.

6. Is that offer due to water?
Thu May 7, 2026, 02:55 PM
May 7

I hope they have a plan to replant in a way that produces as much food but not from crops that rely so heavily on pumped in water.

EuterpeThelo

(437 posts)
7. This
Thu May 7, 2026, 03:13 PM
May 7

makes me unspeakably sad. Our family spaghetti recipe that is now on its fourth generation of being passed down relies on DelMonte tomato sauce.

lostnfound

(17,630 posts)
8. $550 million in revenue is a massive amount of peaches
Thu May 7, 2026, 03:48 PM
May 7

Farms get only a small fraction of end food purchase price. If this is a water shortage problem, I will feel better about it. But if it is just a loss of food production capability for stupid reasons, it’s a tragedy.

(I bet there’s a lot of white peaches in there too, and i love white peaches.)

Marthe48

(23,443 posts)
9. More deforesation
Thu May 7, 2026, 04:01 PM
May 7

It'd be nice if whoever owns the land could get creative with land use. Leave the trees and plant under and around them. But no, they'll tear down the trees, add to the global climate problems by getting rid of vegetation that mitigates the changes humans cause.



senseandsensibility

(25,509 posts)
13. Really sad.
Thu May 7, 2026, 04:35 PM
May 7

Cannery Row in Monterey is famous and of course is no longer, but more recently one of the last canneries in San Jose folded. Well, not really that recently. It was the 80's, and a parent of one of my students actually worked there until the last day it operated. She was a union employee, which shows you how far agricultural workers have fallen. She made pretty good money. Now the ones in the Central Valley are closing? Wow. Very sad. Does this mean that Del Monte won't exist anymore at all?

littlemissmartypants

(34,355 posts)
16. Peach trees are not always easy to maintain. ...
Thu May 7, 2026, 04:53 PM
May 7

Everything has a season... turn, turn, turn...

I found the individual owners of the purchased bankrupt company interesting upon inspection.

Unfortunately, it does appear that they are not currently in the peaches business.

Fear not, though, because many others still are.

Buddyzbuddy

(2,901 posts)
17. I need somebody to explain why we would pay
Thu May 7, 2026, 05:05 PM
May 7

farmers to remove fruit trees that huge growers have been capitalizing on for decades and receiving subsidies.

They're capitalists and Republican for the most part. If anything, pay the farm workers and Del Monte employees subsidies or for retraining for other employment.

The consumer demand isn't less. It's a corporations monopoly that failed. Let the "corporate farmers" if there are any break up the farms into smaller farms and continue to work the peach trees on a smaller scale to sell as a group or to smaller markets.

I admit, I have no farming experience but I do know it's taken years and resources to grow those trees.
Are these Del Monte farms we're talking about? I know markets now sell their own brands of canned fruit. Why wouldn't growers sell to them?

JI7

(93,900 posts)
23. I agree, for all their anti govt talk they totally rely on the govt
Thu May 7, 2026, 05:57 PM
May 7

to stay in business.

electric_blue68

(27,311 posts)
20. The loss of nearly half a million tress! That gets me.
Thu May 7, 2026, 05:21 PM
May 7

Would rmthe farmers if they take the trees down how fast can they do new plantings/crops.

What a shame.

jmowreader

(53,395 posts)
24. Why do I smell housing developers?
Thu May 7, 2026, 06:35 PM
May 7

The development I live in was named after the crop developers plowed under to build this place. I get this weird feeling some HOA-run communities named "Peach Flats" or similar will appear where those trees now stand.

hunter

(40,852 posts)
27. Same here.
Fri May 8, 2026, 08:10 AM
May 8

The billionaires have plans for California and the peach trees are in the way.

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