Hop Harvest report '19

Discussion in 'Beer Talk' started by BBThunderbolt, Nov 30, 2019.

Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. BBThunderbolt

    BBThunderbolt Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,846) Sep 24, 2007 Kiribati
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    The latest issue of New Brewer has the yearly hop , and malt, numbers, here's a few highlights:

    There were a total of 59,725 acres of hops grown this year in the US. That's double the acreage since 2012 (29, 683).

    57,339 of those acres were in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho.

    The US is the largest hop growing country, with Germany in 2nd, 50,452 acres.

    Michigan was the 4th largest US hop growing state, with 720 acres. (for comparison, in the NW, 96% of US hop acreage is represented by multi-generational family farms, averaging 700 acres.)

    76.5 % of hop acreage is for aroma hops, with 23.5% being Alpha varieties.

    The top 10 hops, by acreage, in order: Citra, Cascade, Simcoe, Mosaic, Zeus, Centennial, Columbus/Tomahawk, Amarillo, Chinook, and Pahto.

    New Zealand had 2,200 acres of hops.

    Australia had 1,729 acres of hops.
     
  2. hopfenunmaltz

    hopfenunmaltz Pooh-Bah (2,647) Jun 8, 2005 Michigan
    Pooh-Bah

    NZ and AU have increased acres in response to demand, they were closer to 1000 a piece not to long ago.

    MI has seen reduced acreage, as smaller operations found that it was not profitable and ceased growing.

    Still waiting on my NB issue.
     
    AlcahueteJ and BBThunderbolt like this.
  3. ypsifly

    ypsifly Initiate (0) Sep 22, 2004 Michigan

    I imagined hearing that in Les Nessman's voice, lol.
     
    PapaGoose03 and BBThunderbolt like this.
  4. thedaveofbeer

    thedaveofbeer Savant (1,169) Mar 25, 2016 Massachusetts
    Trader

    How many pounds of hops come from one acre of land?
     
    meefmoff likes this.
  5. jesskidden

    jesskidden Grand Pooh-Bah (3,145) Aug 10, 2005 New Jersey
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Last year, the average for the 3 PNW hop-growing states was 1,943 lbs/acre.
    See the 2018 Hop Growers of America stat pkg for info on the individual hop varieties.

    Footnote on page 10:
     
    #5 jesskidden, Nov 30, 2019
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2019
  6. unlikelyspiderperson

    unlikelyspiderperson Grand Pooh-Bah (3,966) Mar 12, 2013 California
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    I'm surprised California isn't increasing acreage, certainly seems like there's demand enough. Do they also average such a lower yield? Or are nut trees just that much more profitable?
     
  7. BBThunderbolt

    BBThunderbolt Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,846) Sep 24, 2007 Kiribati
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    The articles go into it a bit, but, the sort version is: for commercial operations you need the right latitudes, amount of daylight and darkness at certain times in the growth cycle, certain temperatures, and other variables.
     
  8. unlikelyspiderperson

    unlikelyspiderperson Grand Pooh-Bah (3,966) Mar 12, 2013 California
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    So is it just that the historic hop growing regions of CA don't actually produce high enough quality hops? Sudwerk put out a great beer made with their estate hops, grown in Davis and there is certainly higher latitudes in the state that are arable
     
  9. jesskidden

    jesskidden Grand Pooh-Bah (3,145) Aug 10, 2005 New Jersey
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Idaho only moved into the top 3 of hop-growing states in the mid-1960s. Even then, at #4 California's yield per acre was a bit higher by 100-300 lbs/acre than the other 3 in 1964 - when yields were between 1429 lbs. (ID) to 1750 (CA).

    Between 1958 and 1968, California's hop acreage was reduced by nearly one half, from 5901 to 1500.

    Obviously, as a agricultural product, yields varied from year to year, region to region. My impression was always that by the 1970s hops just weren't as profitable to grow in California as other crops, and other land usage.
     
    #9 jesskidden, Nov 30, 2019
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2019
  10. BBThunderbolt

    BBThunderbolt Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,846) Sep 24, 2007 Kiribati
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Irrigation is another factor. Even though Yakima is basically desert, there's plenty of water available. Cali has water issues.
     
  11. Clibb

    Clibb Aspirant (265) Jun 23, 2013 New Jersey

    Any mention of South Africa or japan?
     
  12. unlikelyspiderperson

    unlikelyspiderperson Grand Pooh-Bah (3,966) Mar 12, 2013 California
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Ya both good points. I was driving home from thanksgiving today and passed through HOPland and it is now wall to wall vineyards. I'm guessing those grapes are both more profitable and at least a shade less water intensive
     
    sharpski and BBThunderbolt like this.
  13. BBThunderbolt

    BBThunderbolt Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,846) Sep 24, 2007 Kiribati
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Neither was mentioned in the "world hops" article. South Africa might be a future player, but I suspect we are a long way away from Japan being any sort of measurable impact grower.
     
    unlikelyspiderperson likes this.
  14. jesskidden

    jesskidden Grand Pooh-Bah (3,145) Aug 10, 2005 New Jersey
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    The Hop Growers of America's website also has links to the International Hop Growers Convention reports - latest one being from August, 2019 so some of the info is listed as "estimated".

    Japan - 106 hectares / 202 metric tons
    South Africa - 427 hectares / 754 metric tons
    (by comparison)
    USA - 24,163 hectares / 49,030 metric tons

    1 hectare = ~2.47 US acres
    1 metric ton = ~2205 pounds
     
  15. hopfenunmaltz

    hopfenunmaltz Pooh-Bah (2,647) Jun 8, 2005 Michigan
    Pooh-Bah

    In the discussion on yields above, it was not stated that variety has the biggest influence. Aroma varieties usually yeild less per acre.

    Centennial has a low yield. Mosaic is a favorite of the farmers, as it is > 2200 lb/ acre.

    They use drip irrigation in Yakima to minimize water costs. Hops are thirsty. About 5 years ago the snowpack was low in the Cascade range, water was scarce.

    CA? Many of the hop fields on the SF peninsula are now houses. Same for around Sacramento. Grapes took over Sonoma county. One could read about this in the Barth Haas Hop Atlas, if you can find it through a library system, or pay 200€.
     
  16. jesskidden

    jesskidden Grand Pooh-Bah (3,145) Aug 10, 2005 New Jersey
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Well, no, not explicitly. I wanted folks to find that out for themselves (pgs 8-10). :smiley:
    :wink:
     
  17. woodchipper

    woodchipper Grand Pooh-Bah (3,735) Oct 25, 2005 Connecticut
    Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    OP- Thanks, I love stats of any kind.
     
    AlcahueteJ and BBThunderbolt like this.
  18. b11

    b11 Devotee (386) Jun 27, 2012 New York

    https://www.nass.usda.gov/Publications/Todays_Reports/reports/hopsan19.pdf
     
  19. JackHorzempa

    JackHorzempa Grand Pooh-Bah (3,375) Dec 15, 2005 Pennsylvania
    Society Pooh-Bah

    GuyFawkes likes this.
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.