Glorious weather sees UK-grown strawberries arrive in supermarkets
UK-grown strawberries are arriving on supermarket shelves after days of bright sunshine and above-average temperatures boosted growth.
Punnets will begin to arrive on Tesco shelves in Surrey, Kent, Herefordshire and some London stores from Friday, with nearly half the country to follow on next week, the supermarket said.
The grocer expects to receive 300 tonnes of UK-grown fruit next week โ roughly one million punnets โ up by more than 100% just three weeks ago.
The whole of the UK is set to be supplied by mid-May.
The news means retailers will have to rely less on Spanish and Moroccan imports in the next few weeks.
Tesco strawberry buyer Callum Baker said: โThe start of the outdoor British strawberry season is a huge feel-good moment in the year as it means summer is just around the corner with many months ahead of outdoor living.
โNext week marks a significant step forward in the transition to British supply, with volumes of UK strawberries into Tesco set to increase by more than double since the beginning of April.
โBased on the extra sunshine weโve just had and good weather forecast over the next few days we predict our total UK strawberry volume to be around 40% next week.
โIf the weather stays relatively good from now then weโll see UK-wide availability of British-grown strawberries by mid-May.โ
Neil Donaldson, commercial director of growers Hall Hunter, which has farms near Wokingham and Wargrave in Berkshire and Godalming in Surrey, said: โCool nights and warm sunny days create the perfect conditions for growing sweet, full-flavoured strawberries โ and thatโs exactly what this weekendโs forecast is bringing.
โThanks to these ideal conditions, weโre expecting a 30% increase in strawberries coming off our farms. Itโs a fantastic start to the UK strawberry season, and weโre hopeful these great conditions will continue.โ
The strawberry variety going into Tesco stores is called Lady Emma, known for its large size and sweet flavour, with 400g punnets costing ยฃ2.50.
Bartosz Pinkosz, operations director at The Summer Berry Company, said: โAs we start to transition from our year-round glasshouse crop, our first outdoor strawberries of the season are being picked this week, as the British weather continues to improve.
โThe weather was poor throughout March, which means weโre not expecting a glut of strawberries like we had last year. But thatโs actually good news for us all, as it means there wonโt be too much fruit all coming at once.
โAnd the brilliant news is we expect the strawberries this year to be particularly sweet.
โWith the unsettled weather in March, the fruit has spent more time on the plant โ and the longer the berry is on the plant, the sweeter it gets. That all points to excellent flavour and quality in this yearโs strawberries.โ
