When to Harvest - the Sonora Pacific group
Transcription
When to Harvest - the Sonora Pacific group
When to harvest? When to Harvest Think about why you harvest. It's because somebody wants to eat. Your goal is to give the consumer what they want. Your produce should look and taste the way they want it by the time it reaches them. If you harvest your entire field at once, some of the produce will be under-mature (too small, green, or bitter) and some will be overmature (too soft, short shelf life). Either way, it's produce that nobody wants. So why harvest it? Since the quality is lower, you have to accept a lower price. You lose money on every kilo. Pay attention to maturity. You can use simple measures of maturity to help you choose and harvest only produce that can reach its best eating quality (leaving the rest in the field to be harvested later). The consumer will be happier, and you will be known for better quality, which will help you sell more and make a better profit. Millennium Challenge Account Cape Verde Ministry of the Environment, Rural Development and Marine Resources Demonstrating postharvest tools. Agland Investment Services, Inc. Te c h n i c a l Te a m Coordination: Lizanne E. Wheeler Editor, Designer, Layout Artist: Chase DuBois Technical Collaboration: Dr. Farbod Youssefi, Dr. Lisa Kitinoja, Lizanne E. Wheeler Post-harvest tools. on e i n a seri es of 5 Postharvest www.mca.cv/pt/formacao/documentos-formacao/ Maturity indices Harvest when ripe Can harvest before ripe Different fruits and vegetables are judged by different maturity indices. The following fruits and vegetables do not ripen after harvest. They should be harvested at full maturity. Use the indices listed below for your products to determine when they are mature. Other products continue to ripen after harvest. For these you need to think about transport time. How many days after harvest does your product reach the consumer? The most common indices are: • size • color • sweetness (sugar content — use Carrot sufficient size, uniform taper, makes crisp sound when broken refractometer to measure) • firmness (use penetrometer to measure) But what is the optimum size? What is the optimum color? Again, it depends on the consumer. Most fruits and vegetables should be harvested at the optimum maturity desired by the consumer, then transported to the market as quickly and carefully as possible. Some products continue to ripen after harvest. This is an advantage. Instead of waiting for these products to ripen in the field, you can harvest them early and let them ripen during transport. They will reach the optimum eating quality desired by the consumer just before they arrive in the market. If a tomato takes 5 days to reach the the market, maybe you harvest pinkgreen tomatoes… Eggplant 40 days from flowering, glossy peel Corn Cabbage silks are dry, kernels exude milky sap when cut open firm Garlic / Onion / Potato plant tops begin to dry out and fall over If you harvest these products before they are mature, they will not ripen and their quality will be inferior. Also in this category: • Cassava • Bell pepper • Cucumber • Cabbage …so that 5 days later, your tomato is red, and the consumer wants to buy it. Also in this category: Papaya 1/4 color change from green, minimum 12% SSC (refractometer) • Banana: cross-section becomes rounded • Mango: shoulder starts to form near stem end, minimum 12% SSC (refractometer) • • • • Orange / Lemon Pineapple Strawberry Grape • Guava • Passion fruit • Breadfruit • Watermelon • Avocado