Knowledge

Packing house

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in the 1880s) and placed in the boxes so that the printed names showed between the slats. In the 1920s tissue wrappers were replaced with printed logos, and ultimately paper stickers. Packed fruit is designated by size, based on the average number of pieces it takes to fill a box. In the days of
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wooden crates, sizes generally ranged from the 100s to the 390s, demonstrating the wide range of sizes. The sizes for the smaller cardboard boxes introduced in the 1950s and still in use today range from the 40s to the 210s, depending upon the variety of fruit being shipped.
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gas is used to bring out the color. Obvious "culls" (fruit that is not suitable to sell for eating due to cosmetic defects) is removed and sold for juice or other uses. Fruit that is ready to be packed into crates or flats is run through a washer and then air-dried.
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developed robotic packing machines in the 1980s. Packed boxes are stored in a "pre-cooler" to prepare them for the trip to market by truck or rail. Fruit was shipped across the country in ventilated railroad cars or
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Bulk fruit (such as apples, oranges, pears, and the like) is delivered to the plant via trucks or wagons, where it is dumped into receiving bins and sorted for quality and size. In the case of
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The fruit is transported via conveyor belts to the grading tables where it is visually sorted into three grades:
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is a facility where fruit is received and processed prior to distribution to market.
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This article is about fruit packinghouses. For meat packinghouses, see
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Today, packing is often still performed by hand, even though
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to help the fruit retain moisture and enhance its appeal.
150: 53:A light coating of natural wax is applied 22: 151: 74:(a technique developed in the town of 135:Historic Orange Preservation Online 27:An apple and pear packing house in 13: 14: 175: 1: 123: 7: 115:is also used to refer to a 101: 10: 180: 15: 94:before the advent of the 159:Agricultural buildings 108:List of packing houses 32: 26: 18:Meat packing industry 29:Pateros, Washington 76:Orange, California 33: 164:Orange production 131:"Citrus Industry" 171: 145: 143: 141: 96:refrigerator car 179: 178: 174: 173: 172: 170: 169: 168: 149: 148: 139: 137: 129: 126: 104: 21: 12: 11: 5: 177: 167: 166: 161: 147: 146: 125: 122: 121: 120: 117:slaughterhouse 110: 103: 100: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 176: 165: 162: 160: 157: 156: 154: 136: 132: 128: 127: 118: 114: 113:Packing house 111: 109: 106: 105: 99: 97: 93: 90: 85: 80: 77: 73: 69: 65: 61: 56: 54: 49: 45: 40: 38: 37:packing house 30: 25: 19: 138:. Retrieved 134: 112: 81: 72:tissue paper 67: 63: 59: 57: 41: 36: 34: 68:orchard run 60:top quality 153:Categories 124:References 140:August 7, 89:insulated 102:See also 48:ethylene 92:boxcars 84:Sunkist 64:average 66:, and 44:citrus 142:2006 98:. 155:: 133:. 62:, 35:A 144:. 119:. 31:. 20:.

Index

Meat packing industry

Pateros, Washington
citrus
ethylene
A light coating of natural wax is applied
tissue paper
Orange, California
Sunkist
insulated
boxcars
refrigerator car
List of packing houses
slaughterhouse
"Citrus Industry"
Categories
Agricultural buildings
Orange production

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