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2026 Virtual Orchard Meetup Series Kicks Off February 27th!

Get ready — the North American Virtual Orchard Meetup Series is back!

Discussion will focus on how 2025 weather patterns influenced pome fruit quality and storability across North America. This timely conversation will address the impacts of extreme heat and other environmental stressors on fruit development, postharvest quality, and overall profitability.

The Impacts of Weather on Pome Fruit Quality and Storability: Lessons from 2025

Join us on
February 27, 2026
10:30 AM PST / 1:30 PM EST
Online via Zoom
Registration: https://wsu.zoom.us/meeting/register/Xu7nO7sxSzufIOu_oED51A



Why You Should Attend

Weather threw plenty of curveballs in 2025 — extreme heat, drought, and unpredictable harvest windows. This webinar brings growers and scientists together to unpack:

These virtual meetups offer a unique chance to share experiences, compare challenges, and talk through practical, science-backed solutions. Whether you are a fruit grower with ample experience, one that has modest experience, or one that is just getting started, the 2026 North American Virtual Orchard Meetups will be the right setting for you to ask questions and find alternative solutions.



A Conversation Led by the Experts

This 90-minute session will feature short presentations, an industry panel, and an inclusive open discussion that will dive deep into heat stress, fruit quality impacts, and adaptive approaches that work.

Featured Presenters

Dr. Lee Kalcsits, Washington State University
Dr. Sonia Hall, Washington State University
Grower & Industry Panel

Panelists will offer regional “state of the fruit” updates based on stored fruit quality and 2025 growing season conditions:


Powered by Collaboration

The 2026 Virtual Orchard Meetup Series is proudly sponsored by SPARC: Strengthening Pear and Apple Resilience to Climate (sparcscri.com), multi-year USDA SCRI project dedicated to reducing crop loss from severe cold and heat.


Don’t Miss Out!

If you’re looking to stay ahead of weather-related challenges, improve fruit quality, and connect with a vibrant grower–researcher community:

Register today and join the conversation!

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