Climate Challenges: The Uneven Cherry Season in British Columbia

Climate Challenges: The Uneven Cherry Season in British Columbia

It’s been a less-than-ideal season for sweet cherry growers in British Columbia this year.

It’s been a less-than-ideal season for sweet cherry growers in British Columbia this year. Sukhpaul Bal, a cherry grower and president of the B.C. Cherry Association, tells The Packer that this season is one of many ups and downs growers in the Canadian province experienced in the last few seasons.

Though this year’s crop does offer retailers good flavor and color, it’s just not as large of a crop as in years past, he said.

Bal says a polar vortex in 2020 hurt that year’s crop, and from 2020 on Mother Nature has kept cherry growers on their toes. In 2021, the temperature reached 116 degrees Fahrenheit (47 degrees Celsius) on his family’s farm in the Okanagan Valley. The heat not only affected the 2021 crop, but the 2022 buds forming. In 2023, a cold event also impacted some cherry production.

Bal says it was a mild winter leading into this season, but within 48 hours the region experienced a major temperature shift to nearly -22 degrees Fahrenheit (about -30 degrees Celsius)

“The trees didn’t have a chance to acclimate to this cold,” he said. “That’s where we saw this huge reduction in volume due to a quick temperature change. We’ve seen that cool temperature before. It’s just how quickly it went from positive mild weather to extreme cold [this time].”

Bal said it’s been tough for the region’s sweet cherry growers who understand the inherent risk of growing stone fruit.

“We know there is risk involved,” he said. “We’re not naive to that and it’s a very delicate crop. We don’t we don’t bank on every single year knocking it out of the park. We know there’s going to be some hiccups, but this past one-to-five-year stretch is nothing like we’ve seen before where there’s quite a bit of damage due to due to these extreme shifts in the temperature.”

Bal says growers have been in communication with the British Columbia province for support. But, the province only reinvests about 2.5% of the GDP generated from agriculture back into the industry.

“That ranks us dead last in the country,” he said, noting his organization and others in the province recognize the need to change that distribution…

Full article here

Source: The Packer

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