South Africa - Heavy rains retard lemon harvest

17.02.2023 619 views

Widespread rain in the north has retarded the lemon harvest in Letsitele, Hoedspruit, Onderberg while Schoemanskloof, west of Nelspruit, reportedly saw some of the most flooding.

Over the past weekend some farms in northeastern Mpumalanga saw almost 400mm of rain due to a strong cutoff low system over South Africa. Fifty-year rainfall records were measured on some farms in the Mpumalanga Lowveld where mud slides have occurred, roads washed away and bridges were damaged.

According to the South African Weather Service, large parts of northeastern South Africa received between 200 and 400mm in the first two weeks of February.

Damage to pump infrastructure
The South African Weather Service had alerted the country to the impending disruptive rain. Farmers were in some cases able to remove their pumps from rivers before the flood waters came down.

Towards the border with Mozambique and northwards some areas received over 400mm during that period and there have been reports of damage to pumps and pump houses on fruit farms in southern Mozambique.

Small amounts of rain have continued falling after the deluge of the weekend, but with the soil as saturated as it is, a little rain easily worsens the situation.

On the bright side, farmers can ease off on irrigation – that is, electricity usage – for the moment; the daily power cuts have been making it an onerous exercise to get through each day’s irrigation schedule.

Moreover, some early lemon producers reportedly had a size problem on their lemons which will now hopefully be solved by the rain.

No guarantee of full harvest in summer rainfall areas 
Producers hold off on the lemon harvest because of the high risk of oleo, and at the moment they cannot get into their citrus orchards to spray.

"We have a plethora of tractors stuck in our orchards when it rains like this but we're used to that," says a citrus producer in Letsitele. In the area there is damage to an irrigation canal which producers will repair themselves.

Another grower outside Nelspruit remarks: "You should know that once in every five or ten years you’re going to struggle with the harvest. It’s part of the risk of planting lemons in a summer rainfall area - you're just not guaranteed that you will be able to pick your whole crop every year."

Says a marketer: "We were supposed to have already started with lemons a month ago but the rain is keeping us out of the orchards."

Not everyone is behind schedule; there are growers who have already finished their first lemon harvest, planning to go through lemon orchards for a second time by the beginning of next month.

The disruption in the lemon crop is an annoyance: the market in the Middle East has been receptive for fresh South African lemons which have been, FreshPlaza is told, outshining the late-season competitors still on the market.

“I expect a bubble in the market now that South Africa can’t pack lemons," a citrus industry source remarks. "Apparently Egyptian lemons are small. The market is waiting for the new season of South African lemons."

Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

04.05.2026

Bulgaria's Kyustendil cherry crop severely affected by frost for second consecutive year

Frosts have caused critical damage to cherry orchards in the Kyustendil region of Bulgaria for the second consecutive spring, with producers reporting near-total crop losses. 

04.05.2026

Vietnam - MoF moves to expand farm insurance support and eligibility

The Ministry of Finance has proposed sharply increasing agricultural insurance premium subsidies to up to 95 per cent and widening the pool of eligible beneficiaries to better share risks with producers, stabilise farm incomes, and strengthen climate resilience.

04.05.2026

Bangladesh - One lakh hectares of rice fields go underwater in haor regions

What should have been a vibrant harvest season in the country’s haor belt across seven districts has instead turned into widespread devastation. 

04.05.2026

Philippines - P150-M insurance buffer vs El Niño but PCIC limits coverage to irrigated farms

The Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation (PCIC) in Western Visayas has set aside P150 million in drought insurance as El Niño conditions intensify, with officials warning that the region is already nearing “critical” risk levels that could threaten thousands of farmers in the coming cropping season.

04.05.2026

Indian banana crops damaged across 809 hectares in Tamil Nadu

Strong winds and heavy rainfall in parts of Tamil Nadu have damaged banana crops across districts, including Theni, Dindigul, Coimbatore, and Salem.

04.05.2026

Poland reports up to 100% fruit crop losses after late April frosts

Fruit growers in Poland are assessing losses after late April frosts damaged crops across multiple regions, with eastern areas most affected and stone fruit production under pressure.

03.05.2026

Vietnam - Aid for agricultural insurance premiums proposed to rise

The Ministry of Finance has proposed increasing support for agricultural insurance premiums and expanding eligible beneficiaries in a move aimed at encouraging greater participation by farmers and agricultural organisations.

03.05.2026

USA - MDARD Awards Over $3.2 Million Through Resilient Food Systems Infrastructure Grant Program

The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD) today announced more than $3.2 million of grants to 10 Michigan entities through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Resilient Food Systems Infrastructure (RFSI) Grant Program.