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Oranges make it through the freeze

By Staff | Feb 5, 2009

ORLANDO (AP) – Citrus growers and vegetable growers appeared Thursday to have weathered the statewide freeze better than expected, but tomato growers took a hit as temperatures stayed below freezing long enough to cause damage to some of those crops.

It will take days for growers to know the extent of the damage. But temperatures in the dense tomato-growing regions of Immokalee, in southwest Florida, and the Palmetto-Ruskin area near Tampa were “cold enough long enough that there will be pockets of damage to those crops,” said Lisa Lochridge, a spokeswoman for the Florida Fruit and Vegetable Association.

Florida is the top producer of fresh tomatoes in the nation.

The mercury was expected to dip Thursday night into the low 20s for the second night in a row in northern Florida, and a record low was possible for the Jacksonville area. Overnight freeze warnings were issued for the northern half of the state.

“This has been one of the coldest winters that we’ve had in Florida in several years,” state meteorologist Ben Nelson said in a message broadcast to Floridians on YouTube.

Temperatures in Lake Okeechobee, where large number of vegetable crops are grown, dipped below freezing but wind helped keep frost off the crops, Lockridge said.

Florida’s citrus growers dodged a bullet since temperatures in the major citrus growing regions didn’t stay at 28 degrees for more than four hours – the breaking point when damage begins. Growers in the nation’s No. 1 citrus-producing state are still assessing damage from a freeze last month.

“There will probably be spot damage here and there but in terms of large-scale problems, we came through OK,” Michael Sparks, CEO of Florida Citrus Mututal, said in a statement.