Thank you, Jim, and good afternoon from our global world headquarters in scenic Santa Paula, California. I know that you have other earnings calls options at this time of day and I thank you for joining us, particularly our new analysts at Seaport Global and D.A. Davidson. I'll start by discussing our financial results for the first quarter followed by our balance sheet and outlook. Please note that all comparisons are year-over-year unless otherwise noted. We will also be discussing non-GAAP results and a reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures is included in our earnings release. We issued our proxy statement earlier in the month which identifies a number of governance enhancements such as our Anti-Hedging/Anti-Pledging, board self-evaluations and creation of a Sustainability Committee. We also have updated and Investor Relations presentation on our website at ir.calavo.com. On a consolidated basis, first quarter revenue was $220 million, which is at the midpoint of our guidance. This is a decline of $53 million or 19% year-over-year. This was primarily driven by three factors: lower avocado prices, which decreased 14% from last year and had an impact of $16 million; $25 million lower RFG revenues from the loss of our Midwest co-packing relationship which as Jim said, cycles in April; and the ongoing impact of COVID-19 which particularly impacted our foodservice customers. Even with the decline in consolidated revenue, avocado volumes increased 2% year-over-year reflecting the ongoing trend of higher consumer demand. Gross profit increased 13% year-over-year to $17.8 million from $15.8 million in the first quarter of 2020 and our gross profit margin percentage expanded to 8.1% from 5.8%. The increase in gross profit and margin percent was mainly due to improvements in the Fresh segment as we delivered higher avocado gross margins in the quarter by managing our pricing spread and sales mix better than in the prior year. As you may remember, the fruit quality was a significant issue last year with avocados. These improvements were partially offset by a decline in gross profits in the RFG business due to a number of factors including higher labor costs and increased spoilage on fresh fruit and vegetables resulting from major port delays, poor quality and yield due to weather events in Florida and Central America, and unabsorbed overhead due to lower overall volumes. SG&A expenses declined 13% to $14.2 million from $16.3 million in the year ago quarter, primarily due to the decrease in salary and benefit expense as a result of our consolidation initiatives enacted in May 2020. Adjusted EBITDA was $9.4 million for the quarter compared to $4.5 million for the comparable period in the prior year and came in at the high end of our guidance that we provided on last quarter's call. Net income for the first quarter was $5.3 million or $0.30 per share, up from a net loss of $938,000 or negative $0.05 per share loss in the prior-year period. Adjusted net income was $3 million or $0.17 per share compared to $0.8 million or $0.04 last year. Now, moving on to our three business segments. Sales in the Fresh segment decreased 13% year-over-year to $115.5 million from $133.2 million in the first quarter of 2020. Importantly, while revenue declined, avocado volume increased 2% from the prior year as consumer demand for avocados continues to grow. Similar to last quarter, this quarter's higher volume was offset by a 14% decline in the average selling price as a result of increased market supply due to the large Mexico harvest this year. And unlike last year, when foodservice and wholesalers that serve smaller retailers and restaurants helped absorb supply, COVID continued to constrain sales to these customers in the first quarter. As a reminder, our exposure to foodservice is about 20% and wholesalers comprise an incremental 6%. Gross profit in the Fresh segment increased $6.5 million to $13.1 million or 11.3% of revenue, up from $6.6 million or 4.9% of revenue in the first quarter of 2020. Please note that on the last table of the earnings press release, we disclose pounds of avocados sold and gross margin of $0.12 per pound compared to $0.05 per pound last year. At 25 pounds per case, this returns us to our historical target range of $3 to $4 per case. In RFG, sales declined to $90.3 million for the first quarter from $120.9 million in the prior-year period. The decrease primarily reflects lost sales from the termination of our co-packer relationship in the Midwest, which ended in April of last year. So we will lap comparison during the second quarter. Excluding the co-packer impact, revenue declined 6%, primarily driven by a 4% decline in volume and less favorable product mix of more cut fruit and vegetables compared to last year when the mix consisted of more value-added meals. Gross profit for the first quarter decreased to breakeven compared to a gross profit of $2.9 million or 2.4% of sales in the same period last year. This decline was due to weather related supply chain disruptions leading to major port delays and poor quality fruit, which impacted yields. Labor shortages due to COVID also contributed to lower yields and higher costs. For the Food segment, sales were again impacted by soft demand in the foodservice channel due to COVID-19. For the quarter, sales declined to $16.5 million, down from $20.5 million in the year ago quarter. Foodservice comprises about 50% of this business. Gross profit was $4.7 million or 28.7% of sales as compared to $6.4 million or 31% of sales in the first quarter of 2020. The lower gross margin was primarily the result of lower volumes, partially offset by decrease in avocado costs. Turning to our balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $148 million of cash, liquid investments and available debt capacity. During the quarter we amended and extended the terms of our secured credit facility increasing the revolver commitment by $20 million now to be a total of $150 million and extending the maturity by five years. Total debt including finance leases was $45 million and our leverage ratio was 0.75 times. We continue to have a strong balance sheet and low leverage, positioning us to take advantage of potential opportunities and invest in the current infrastructure for the future. In addition, we paid our annual cash dividend of $1.15 per share in December, which represented a 4.5% increase from the prior year and our ninth consecutive year of increasing dividends. This yields about 1.5% at recent stock prices. Finally, in the first quarter, we entered into a separation agreement with FreshRealm. Essentially, we relinquished our previously written off promissory note and equity in FreshRealm in exchange for new $6 million note and equity participation in any future monetization event. As we look to the second quarter of 2021, we see a continued near-term impact from the pandemic as it remains difficult to predict when foodservice demand will return to pre-COVID levels. While we continue to see avocado volumes growing, we believe that the same supply and demand dynamics will keep pricing at lower levels than the prior year. In addition, our RFG business continues to face increased labor costs and unabsorbed overhead due to lower volumes. Therefore, we expect second quarter revenues to be in a range of $255 million to $275 million, which is a year-over-year decrease of 6% at the midpoint and adjusted EBITDA to be between $14 million and $18 million, which is an increase of 19% at the midpoint from the second quarter of 2020. The slightly wider EBITDA guidance range reflects both the impact of the recent severe weather events in the North West, Texas and the Northeast in which we were not able to ship or produce in our RFG facilities in those regions as well as the near-term uncertainty of our labor pool due to reluctance of many workers toward getting vaccinated at this time. This forecast also presumes a stable Mexican peso exchange rate. Jim and I look forward to seeing you at two upcoming virtual conferences, the D.A. Davidson Consumer Conference being held tomorrow and the ROTH Annual Conference on March 16. On a final note, Jim and I would like to congratulate our former CEO and Board Chairman Lee Cole on his retirement and thank him again for building this company that we are now entrusted with. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for questions.