Blueberries MEGA FACTORY: Processing Thousands of Blueberries with AI

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Publicado 2024-01-15
Have you ever wondered how blueberries are grown and processed on a large scale? More than 200 million pounds of blueberries are produced each year in North America. In this episode, we will explore how the blueberries are harvested with huge machines, and how they are sorted, washed, and packed. Advanced AI sorting scanners play a crucial role in separating ripe berries from unripe ones during harvesting. These scanners use computer vision to analyze the color, size, and firmness of each berry in real-time, ensuring only the highest-quality fruit is collected.

On large-scale blueberry farms, mechanical harvesters are often used to efficiently pick ripe berries. These machines use vibrating rods or combs to gently shake the berries off the bushes, and the fruit falls onto conveyors or catchment systems.

At the processing plant, the berries go through a sorting process to remove any remaining leaves, stems, or unripe berries. The berries then undergo a thorough washing process to remove any dirt or debris.

Packaging is also a crucial step: cleaned and sorted blueberries are then packed into various packaging formats, such as clamshells, punnets, or bulk containers. The packaging is designed to protect the berries during transportation and maintain their freshness.

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You can support the companies featured in this episode:
KOKAN Air Berry Harvester
airharvesters.com/

Wish Farms
wishfarms.com/

Elifab & Ellips Next Level Grading
ellips.com/
elifab.com/

TOMRA
www.tomra.com/

GP Graders
gpgraders.com/

Friopacking
friopacking.pe/

California Giant Berry Farm
www.calgiant.com/

INDUSER
www.induser.es/

East Coast Wild Blueberry
www.eastcoastwildblueberry.ca/

Packaging Automation
www.pal.co.uk/

Oxford Wild Blueberries
oxfordwildblueberries.com/

MSU Extension

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Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @mortenborg
    Apparently all basic computer algorithms are now "AI"...
  • @nbmooselovers
    My jaw is in my lap at all of the technology to process blueberry's, and people have to wait six months for an operation. Also you work at sorting blueberries all day long and are driving home on the freeway. And all you see is a steady stream of blueberries coming at your windshield!! 🤪
  • While people in some corporations are reluctant to work with AI, it is already happening in the agricultural business! Amazing! It’s also good to know that blueberries go through multiple washings before they are packed.
  • @Zosia.B
    Berries you pick yourself straight from the bushes are the tastiest and sweetest. As well as the fact that these berries from the forest do not have so many chemicals on them. The berry is a delicate fruit that should be eaten shortly after picking. To withstand transport and then weeks of storage in stores, chemicals must be sprayed. There are people here who have never picked berries in the forest and write that those from the forest are small and sour. This is complete nonsense, because no one collects unripe fruit from a bush (unless it is a machine) and there are areas where forest berries are similar in size to cultivated ones (I picked them myself).
  • Blueberries have always been my favorite fruit. Thanks for sharing.
  • @thepeyerls
    I loved the process! However the only flaw I saw was the employees handling the open containers with ungloved hands, thus introducing bacteria to the blueberries.
  • @cybermachines
    The AI blueberry processing factory is really interesting, it's also the first time I've seen it
  • @ja1756
    My friend is addicted to blueberries. He is like a Hoover. He's going to Love this little video. I'll send it him. ❤
  • I would be interested in how AI is helping with sorting. I suspect its machine learning from an image library which isnt AI at all, but AI is what everyone likes to call any form of automation these days
  • I like how commercialy grown blueberries are sold at farmers markets. Usually by crooks claiming they are sourced locally
  • @zpasternack171
    My grandparents had a blueberry farm in Pennsylvania. I grew up picking blueberries every summer. I would earn about $40, which was a lot of money if you were 11 in 1966. I wonder what my grandfather would have thought about all this. I guess for me, I feel a little sad.
  • @Do-si
    How they wrote this script tho.. Cutting labor cost will improve the consumer satisfaction... Lol 😂
  • these are the blueberries with white interiors and more pesticides than vitamins left in them
  • @milanpetrik7419
    The company has photo and documentation of every berry which passed its conveyor belt.
  • @ab-bc2gr
    Not so sure. We get unripe berries, squashed berries, small, med and large berries and berries with stems still on them - all in one bag.
  • @adamkays7639
    These baskets are strategically placed onto the conveyors. That machine is slapping those baskets
  • @jennywu73
    I put blueberries in my pancake mix, and a few on top of my oats in the morning.
  • WoW I shall look at the humble blueberry very differently from now on 😮
  • Saying "Human inspection represents the conclusive sorting stage where berries undergo a final examination to detect and remove any lingering defects or contaminants the ai detector machine or sorter may have over looked." just after praising how much better and faster, etc the machine is at detecting and sorting feels like a cop out for the company, if the machines were so much better you wouldn't have a human doing the final check... This is just another company trying to get costs down at the expense of everything else. They could employ people to sort it, but "that's too expensive" which actually translates to "I don't get as much profits, so I can't buy another yacht this year." None of these huge companies are struggling, the fact they can afford the machines in the first places shows that they're not struggling by any means.