A prolonged dry spell across areas of New Jersey has made harvesting cranberries slow, expensive and almost impossible for many farmers as reservoirs dry up, water tables shrink and a general lack ...
Wet harvesting often produces berries that are used for juices, sauces, dried cranberries, and other cranberry products, but some cranberries are also harvested by dry harvesting. As the name ...
These wet harvest cranberries will be made into juices, jellies, and dried fruit.” Steidle told Storyful. “This method involves flooding the bogs to help remove the berries from the vines.
Cranberries didn't stop growing during COVID, and they're not going to stop growing during the drought ... you'll go out in the woods, and it's extremely dry. It's dangerously, dangerously dry." ...