(1) More than the following shall be considered damage:
- (a) Slight handling bruises and carton bruises that are incident to proper handling.
- (b) Sunburn or sprayburn, if there is no change in the normal color of the fruit, softening of the flesh, or blistering or cracking of the skin.
- (c) Russeting at the calyx end of Bartlett pears, as long as the russeting is not visible for more than one-half inch when the pear is placed calyx end down on a flat surface.
- (d) Light russeting that is not characteristic of the variety, when the affected area does not exceed an aggregate of fifteen percent of the surface.
- (e) Slight pebbling on Bartlett pears that does not materially detract from the appearance.
(2) In addition, a pear may show one or a combination of the following as long as the aggregate area does not exceed three-fourths inch in diameter:
- (a) Limb rubs that are light, not soft, and affect an aggregate area not to exceed three-fourths inch in diameter.
- (b) Hail marks when the injury is superficial and affects an aggregate area not to exceed one-fourth inch in diameter.
- (c) Heavy russeting, such as is characteristic of frost injury, as long as the aggregate area does not exceed one-half inch in diameter.
- (d) Two slight, healed depressions that do not materially affect the general appearance of the fruit.
- (e) Sooty blotch that affects an aggregate area of ten percent when the blotch is slight or thin, or one-half inch when the blotch is moderate, or three-eighths inch when the blotch is heavy.
[Statutory Authority: Chapter 15.17 RCW, RCW 15.17.030, and chapter 34.05 RCW. WSR 09-01-095, § 16-439-217, filed 12/16/08, effective 1/16/09.]