The apple exports from Giaborue for the 1933 seasou , were the smallest for . six years. Only 10,810 casesookf k fruit were sent away, and 'of this. total, 198 eases were pears. The exports vere reduced to some extent by small crops and also by the reluctance of some growers to venture oq the overseas markets after the poor results of the past few (seasons. As in the past, the United Kingdom has absorbed most of the Gisborne apples. The proportion of the crop sent to Canada this year is greatly in excess of anything during the past three or four years, while the proportion to South .America is larger.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 121, 25 May 1933, Page 3
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109Untitled Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 121, 25 May 1933, Page 3
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