Thank you, Steve, and good afternoon to everyone on the call. I’ll start with a brief review of our fiscal second quarter performance and touch on some of the drivers within our three reportable segments. Then I’ll provide a snapshot of our financial position and conclude with some thoughts on the current industry conditions that we are seeing. Total revenue for the second quarter of fiscal 2023 was $221.1 million, a 20% decrease compared to the same period last year, driven by lower per unit avocado sales pricing. Our average per unit sales pricing decreased 36% during the quarter. The impact of which was partially offset by a 19% increase in avocado volumes sold. Both the higher volume and lower pricing were driven by higher industry supply out of Mexico relative to the limited supply in the same period last year that drove pricing to near-record levels. Gross profit decreased by $1.7 million to $18.1 million in the second quarter, while gross profit percentage increased 110 basis points to 8.2% of revenue. The decrease was driven by lower per unit margins on avocado sales, which was substantially offset by the higher volumes noted above. Per unit margins were negatively impacted by the mix of volume from source regions. Current year volumes were heavily concentrated in Mexico source fruit, whereas the prior year period was advantaged by the positive influence from an accelerated California harvest brought about by high market prices. While per box margins did not match the elevated levels from the prior year, we experienced meaningful sequential improvement versus fiscal first quarter and ended the quarter at a high point. SG&A expense increased $0.6 million or 3% compared to the same period last year, primarily due to the consolidation of expenses from the Blueberry segment. Normalizing for this accounting dynamic, our core SG&A expenses were consistent with the prior year period, which is a positive signal amid this inflationary environment. Adjusted net income was $0.5 million or $0.01 per diluted share compared to $2.6 million or $0.04 per diluted share for the same period last year. Adjusted EBITDA was $7.6 million compared to $9.2 million for the same period last year. The decreases in both of these figures were primarily due to lower gross profit attributed to lower per unit margins. Turning to our segments. Our Marketing and Distribution segment net sales decreased 21% to $215.3 million for the quarter, and segment adjusted EBITDA decreased $3.1 million or 26% to $8.6 million. Net sales and adjusted EBITDA declines were due to the avocado pricing and volume dynamics previously described. Our International Farming segment operates orchards from which substantially all free produced is sold to our Marketing and Distribution segment. Production from this segment is currently derived from Peru. The operations are under development in other areas of Latin America. Segment revenues and EBITDA are concentrated in the second half of our fiscal year in alignment with the Peruvian avocado harvest season, which typically runs from April through August of each year. The segment’s contributions in the first half of our fiscal year tend to be smaller on an absolute and relative basis. With this in mind, total segment sales in the International Farming segment were $6 million and decreased by 14% compared to the same period last year, due primarily to lower packet and cooling service revenue. Segment adjusted EBITDA improved $1.4 million to negative $1.1 million, due primarily to the impact of lower losses generated at our early-stage mango farms during the quarter. Activity in our Blueberry segment is concentrated in the first and fourth quarters of our fiscal year in alignment with the Peruvian blueberry harvest season, which typically runs from July through January. As a result, for the second quarter ended April, our Blueberry segment results were negligible with net sales of $1.7 million and segment adjusted EBITDA of $0.1 million. Shifting to our financial position. Cash and cash equivalents were $20.9 million as of April 30, 2023, compared to $52.8 million at October 31, 2022. As a reminder, our operating cash flows are seasonal in nature and can be temporarily influenced by working capital shifts resulting from varying payment terms to growers in different source regions. In addition, the company is building its growing crops inventory in its International Farming segment during the first half of the year for ultimate harvest and sale that will occur during the second half of the fiscal year. While these increases in working capital can cause operating cash flows to be unfavorable in individual quarters, it is not indicative of operating cash performance that management expects to realize for the full year. That said net cash used in operating activities was $26.1 million for the 6 months ended April 30, 2023, compared to $37 million for the same period last year. The improvement was primarily driven by the effect of better operating performance, net of non-cash items, combined with favorable net changes in working capital. During the current year period, our working capital position benefited from the impact of relatively stable per unit price points on Mexican fruit. Stable prices limited the movement in accounts receivable, inventory and grower payable balances, whereas prior year working capital movement was negatively impacted by the rising price environment that we experienced during the first half of the year. Capital expenditures were $34.9 million for the 6 months ended April 30, 2023, compared to $29.1 million last year. Current year expenditures include $9.1 million of spend associated with irrigation installation and early-stage plant cultivation in our Blueberry segment, which was not consolidated in the prior year. Capital expenditures in both years included avocado orchard development, preproduction orchard maintenance and land improvements in Peru and Guatemala. In addition, fiscal 2023 capital expenditures included construction costs on our new UK distribution facility that opened in April of this year. For the full year fiscal 2023, we continue to expect CapEx related to our core avocado business to be lower than fiscal 2022. That being said, we will incur additional costs as we ramp up development of the Moruga blueberries project in the Olmos region of Peru. In terms of our near-term outlook, we are providing some context around our expectations for industry conditions to help inform your modeling assumptions. Pricing is expected to be consistent on a sequential basis, but lower on a year-over-year basis by approximately 35% to 40% compared to the $2.03 per pound average experienced in third quarter of fiscal 2022. The industry continues to expect volumes to be approximately 20% higher in the fiscal 2023 third quarter versus the prior year period, primarily due to the combination of California’s harvest shifting to the third quarter versus the second quarter last year, a strong Peruvian harvest outlook and a larger off blue Mexican harvest. In terms of our own farm production in Peru, we anticipate volumes to be in the range of 125 million to 135 million pounds for the 2023 harvest season. We expect sales of our own fruit to be more heavily weighted to the fiscal fourth quarter, which should have a corresponding effect on the cadence of our adjusted EBITDA generation. Note that while the inflationary impact on our cost structure has peaked, those costs remain at elevated levels and remain a headwind to driving higher per unit margins and adjusted EBITDA assuming pricing remains consistent with levels realized in the fiscal first half. That concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, now over to you. Please open the call to Q&A.