Do You Know Where Holiday Cranberries Come From?

A lot of them are grown in Massachusetts in a unique growing process
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 28, 2024 9:30 AM CST
Do You Know Where Holiday Cranberries Come From?
Workers adjust floating booms, left, as cranberries are loaded for transport and processing during a wet harvest at Rocky Meadow Bog, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024, in Middleborough, Mass.   (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Weeks before Thanksgiving, some of the cranberries that will be on dinner plates Thursday are floating on the Rocky Meadow bog in southeastern Massachusetts. The cranberries have turned this pond pinkish crimson. As the AP reports, several workers, up to their waist in water, gently corral the berries toward a pump that vacuums them up onto a waiting truck. There, the berries are run through a system that separates them from leaves and vines and are transported to a processing plant, which eventually turns them into sauce, juice, or sweet and dried berries.

The native wetland plants that produce cranberries start growing in May. When they are ready to be harvested, farmers flood their bogs with water and send out a picking machine to shake the berries from the vines. Then more water is added to the bog, and the freed cranberries float to the surface. "The season has been pretty good this year. We've had a pretty good crop," says Steve Ward, a second-generation cranberry grower. The harvest runs from September through early November, and Ward is expected to produce between 15,000 and 20,000 barrels, the best crop he's had in three years. About 80% of those berries will go to Ocean Spray, a massive producer of cranberry products in the US.

This bog is one of nearly 300 in Massachusetts that cover some 14,000 acres, and this year farmers are projected to produce 2.2 million barrels of cranberries, with one barrel amounting to 100 pounds. That's an increase of 12% over last year. Massachusetts is the second-biggest cranberry producing region in the US behind Wisconsin, and the industry there dates back to the 1800s.

story continues below

Despite the size of the sector, farmers in the state have weathered several challenges over the years, from trade wars to falling prices to a glut of berries. Some have sold off their bogs or moved to diversify by putting solar panels around their bogs. Ward says farmers are also having to adapt to a changing climate. "We have had some challenges with some of the hot weather and had one of the longest dry spells we have ever had," he says. "We are having more 90-degree days clumped together. The cranberry plants just don't like that type of weather." (More cranberries stories.)

Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X