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County ag department releases annual report

Close-up of almond shells and leaves on the ground in Madera County.
Almond shells and leaves scattered on the ground during harvest in Madera County, California.

Madera County Agricultural Commissioner Rusty Lantsberger released the county’s annual crop report last week and it indicated a drop in production.

According to the report, the gross value of all production was $1,949,532,000, a decrease of $52 million or 3.6 percent as compared to the 2019 crop report.

Lantsberger indicated that the decrease could be attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, ongoing drought conditions, water deliveries, labor shortages, export markets and decreased commodity values.

Madera County is currently ranked No. 10 of 58 counties in California. This is an improvement of one spot from last year’s report.

For the 11th year in a row, almond is the top crop in the county while milk was

No. 2. Pistachios continued a move to the top and ranked No. 3 while grapes fell to No. 4. Figs, which didn’t appear in the top 10 last year, is seventh.

In the state, Madera County is tops in fig production and third in raisin grape production. The county is fourth in pistachios and almond production and fifth in table tabbies. In all, the county is in the top 10 in nine commodity production.

In addition, the county ranks 18th among all counties in the united states in ag production.

The following are the county’s top produts, by rank, commodity and dollar value.

2020 million dollar crops

No. 1: Almonds, nuts and hulls — $689,402,000

No. 2: Milk — $317,874,000

No. 3: Pistachios — $285,409,000

No. 4: Grapes — $221,032,000

No. 5: Pollination — $65,190,000

No. 6: Cattle and calves — $41,443,000

No. 7: Figs — $31,115,000

No. 8: Replacement heifers — $30,096,000

No. 9: Nursery stock — $27,874,000

No. 10: Corn silage — $24,198,000

No. 11: Poultry — $21,373,000

No. 12: Tomatoes — 19,394,000

No. 13: Oranges — $16,637,000

No. 14: Wheat — $15,623,000

No. 15: Alfalfa — $14,251,000

No. 16: Rangeland — $9,675,000

No. 17: Walnuts — $7,789,000

No. 18: Peaches — $6,021,000

No. 19: Plums, dried — $5,847,000

No. 20: Cherries — $4,994,000

No. 21: Honey — $1,753,000

No. 21: Olives, fresh and oil — $1,411,000

No. 22: Oat hay — $1,153,000

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