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A harvest crew with Tuxedo Corn Company works to pick, package and transport the company’s Olathe sweet corn from a field west of Olathe off Falcon Road on July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
A harvest crew with Tuxedo Corn Company works to pick, package and transport the company’s Olathe sweet corn from a field west of Olathe off Falcon Road on July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
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For 41 years the Tuxedo Corn Company of Olathe Colorado has been growing and shipping its popular Olathe Sweet-brand sweet corn to grocery stores all over North America. This year’s harvest began early Thursday morning, with crews out to hand-pick the corn.

This season Tuexdo Corn Company founder and farmer John Harold had planned to ship 600,000 boxes of corn to deliver his large Kroger contract. At 48 ears per box, the estimated yield in 2023 was 28.8 million ears. An infestation of ear worms has curtailed that estimate. Harold said he expects to ship about 100,000 fewer boxes than normal, with crews picking around the infested plants.

The company is the largest grower of sweet corn in Colorado, with tens of thousands of acres of rural Olathe countryside planted each year. The corn is usually picked by hand due to the tenderness of its kernels, but this year workers are inspecting every single plant carefully to avoid the ear worms.

Once the corn is harvested, it’s boxed, iced and ready for delivery. Consumers can expect to see the corn in Colorado grocery stores in the coming days and weeks.

TOP: Through the use of a 36-mm extension tube, a ripened ear of Tuxedo Corn CompanyÕs Olathe Sweet-brand sweet corn is seen in the morning light during harvest operations in a field west of Olathe on July 20, 2023. BOTTOM: A crew works to harvest the corn by hand that same day. (Photos by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
TOP: Through the use of a 36-mm extension tube, a ripened ear of Tuxedo Corn Company’s Olathe Sweet-brand sweet corn is seen in the morning light during harvest operations in a field west of Olathe on July 20, 2023. BOTTOM: A crew works to harvest the corn by hand that same day. (Photos by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
A harvest crew with Tuxedo Corn Company hand-picks the company's Olathe Sweet-brand sweet corn from a field west of Olathe off Falcon Road Thursday morning July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
A harvest crew with Tuxedo Corn Company hand-picks the company’s Olathe Sweet-brand sweet corn from a field west of Olathe off Falcon Road Thursday morning July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
LEFT: Workers carry arm-fulls of corn to be sorted during harvest operations in a field west of Olathe on July 20, 2023. RIGHT: Workers lift up the ears of corn after picking them. (Photos by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
LEFT: Workers carry arm-fulls of corn to be sorted during harvest operations in a field west of Olathe on July 20, 2023. RIGHT: Workers lift up the ears of corn after picking them. (Photos by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
Workers with the Tuxedo Corn Company inspect each plant as they harvest the ears of corn by hand from a field west of Olathe off Falcon Road Thursday morning July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
Workers with the Tuxedo Corn Company inspect each plant as they harvest the ears of corn by hand from a field west of Olathe off Falcon Road Thursday morning July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
Through a reflection of melting packaging ice, workers with Tuxedo Corn Company work to prepare crates of sweet corn for icing and shipment at the company's headquarters and shipping facility in Olathe, Colo., during harvest operations Thursday morning, July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)
Through a reflection of melting packaging ice, workers with Tuxedo Corn Company work to prepare crates of sweet corn for icing and shipment at the company’s headquarters and shipping facility in Olathe, Colo., during harvest operations Thursday morning, July 20, 2023. (Photo by William Woody/Special to The Denver Post)