Yet
more crop failures after the US lost 20% of their wheat crop as a
result of a single weather incident
'Catastrophic'
Frost In England Destroys Half of This Year's Grape Harvest,
Winemakers Say
6
May, 2017
After
a "catastrophic" late spring frost hit the English
countryside last week, wine growers say at least half of this year's
grape harvest has been wiped out.
According
to the BBC, the chief executive of Denbies Wine Estate in Surrey,
England, said about 75
percent of the buds were killed by the frost.
Denbies is one of 133 wineries in England that produced five million
bottles of wine in 2015.
Chris
White of Denbies said the "catastrophic" damage had been "a
blow" to the industry.
"It
was an early start to the year with the mild weather," White
told the BBC.
"Although
we do get frosts at this time of year, because of the advanced stage
of the buds and the sheer drop of temperature, down to (21 degrees
Fahrenheit), none of the measures we put in place made any
difference," he said.
“Parts
of the vineyard have lost quite a few of the primary buds but we
still remain optimistic for a crop that will produce a quality
harvest if not as big as the last few years,” White said.
In
attempting to stave off the frost's impact on the buds, wine
producers used frost fans and hundreds of candles that go by the
French term "bougies" are lit to try to warm the air
around the vines and prevent the frost from sticking.
White
said "most vineyards in England will have been affected to some
degree," adding that wine producers have to have "broad
shoulders" in their line of business.
"With
the weather, we're in the lap of the gods," White said.
Nick
Wenman, founder and owner of Albury Organic Vineyard in Surrey, told
BBC Radio 4's Today program that the frost that hit over three nights
last week was "like an Arctic wind which blew through the
vineyard and froze everything in its path."
Wenman
said 70-80 percent of the buds at his vineyard had been damaged,
which translates into a shortfall of 50 percent of its yield.
"It's
a long-term business so we have to have a long-term view, but it's
certainly not good news," Wenman said. "If it happened
every year, it would be something we couldn't put up with."
On
his blog, Wenman wrote that it had been one
of the hardest weeks he had faced since
he started the vineyard eight years ago.
"It's
been a stark reminder of the difficulties faced by wine producers in
the country and, yes, at this moment we are indeed asking ourselves
whether we were mad to try and grow vines in England," he said.
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