Friday, July 2, 2021 CapitalPress.com 7 Cherry growers race to harvest fruit during record heat wave By SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press In a race against nature, cherry growers across the Northwest are scram- bling to pick fruit during a record-breaking heat wave. Across Washington and Oregon, crews have been working night shifts or early mornings to avoid the heat. Some growers are leav- ing large blocks of fruit on trees to protect work crews or because the fruit, exposed to too much heat too quickly, became overripe. Growers are moving 500,000 boxes a day, B.J. Thurlby, president of North- west Cherry Growers, told the Associated Press. “We’re right in the mid- dle of Bing harvest,” said Andy Handley, a small-scale orchardist in East Wenatchee, Wash. “(The heat) couldn’t have come at a worse time.” His region is picking the last Rainiers, is in the thick of Bing harvest and has yet to begin picking later vari- eties, including Sweethearts and Skeenas. According to the National Weather Service, Wenatchee has been in triple-digit heat since June 26: 107 degrees Capital Press File The heat wave has forced cherry pickers to work at nights or the early mornings to avoid high temperatures. Fahrenheit the 27th, 108 the 28th and 115 projected for the 29th. With nights in the 80- to 90-degree range, most cher- ries have had no opportu- nity for overnight chilling, crucial for size development and fi rmness. The heat has also hastened sugar devel- opment, meaning cherries ripen all at once, compress- ing the harvest timeline. “When it gets so hot, the fruit stops growing. And then it just starts to cook on the trees,” said Handley. In one orchard, Handley walked away from 40,000 pounds — about 30% of that orchard’s crop. Handley, whose crew is starting at 4:30 a.m. daily, is also short on labor. Growers across Wenatchee and Yakima say because California’s cherry harvest started late, pick- ing crews have been late to arrive in Washington. Kirstjn Eggers, another small-scale Wenatchee grower, is missing half of her usual crew because many of her “regulars” are still pick- ing farther south. Eggers’ crew the past few nights has started picking at 7 p.m. and worked until 2 or 4 a.m. “We’ve had a lot of over- ripe fruit due to the heat and shortage of pickers,” she said. Some large operations with more established H-2A visa worker programs are faring better. Teah Smith, entomologist and ag consultant at Yaki- ma-based Zirkle Fruit Co., said Zirkle has a relatively strong labor force this sea- son, with 250 pickers in the orchards. The crews, she said, have been working from about 2 a.m. to 11 a.m. “I think there will be some damage from heat,” she said. In Oregon, the Dalles region is also under a tri- ple-digit heat warning June 26 through July 4. “We have never experi- enced these temperatures in June before,” said Brenda Thomas, grower and pres- ident of Orchard View Farms in the Dalles. Thomas said she’s pri- oritizing worker health and safety, only picking from 5 a.m. to 10 a.m. High temperatures worry berry growers By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press AURORA, Ore. — Unseasonably hot weather in Oregon’s Willamette Valley has berry farmers on edge ahead of what fi gures to be a frenetic harvest. With triple-digit tempera- tures June 26-28, Bernadine Strik, extension berry crops specialist for Oregon State University, said last week growers were trying to pick ripe fruit that could be dam- aged by the scorching heat. Berries typically do not fare well under such condi- tions, Strik said. Raspberries and blackberries may dry out and become sunburned, making them unmarketable. The heat can also cause berries to stick on the plant during machine harvesting, resulting in lower effi ciency and yield. Blueberries, too, can be sunburned if not managed properly, Strik said. How much crop damage grow- ers experience remains to be seen, and may depend on a variety of factors including diff erences in berry varieties and micro-climates. “As you can imagine, growers are kind of anx- ious,” Strik said. “There is just not much they can do but wait and see with many of these crops.” Strik, who works at the OSU North Willamette Research and Extension George Plaven/Capital Press File Sprinklers irrigate blueberries on a hot summer after- noon at Berries Northwest north of Albany, Ore., in the Willamette Valley. Center in Aurora, Ore., said a crew arrived June 24 to begin hand-picking organic blue- berries on research plots, and machine harvesting of black- berries and raspberries was to follow. Certain types of early-rip- ening blueberries, such as Duke, are more heat-resis- tant than later-season culti- vars, Strik said. However, researchers have not had much of a chance to test Duke under extreme heat. “Our growers are just going to do what they can,” Strik said. For fresh market blueber- ries, Strik said most growers have dual irrigation systems that include overhead sprin- klers designed to keep the plant canopy cool when tem- peratures rise above 90-95 degrees — a process known as evaporative cooling. Strik recommended grow- ers turn on their evaporative cooling systems for 20 minutes every hour when temperatures hit the 90-95 degree bench- mark to prevent sunburn. Most blackberry and rasp- berry growers, however, do not have evaporative cooling systems, Strik said, leaving them with no way to mitigate sunburn. Instead, she expects they will be machine harvest- ing more frequently to stay ahead of any potential crop damage. Strik also suggested grow- ers do their machine harvest- ing either at night or as early in the morning as possible to avoid the problem of berries sticking on the cane. “That’s the only thing our growers can really do,” she said. Matt Unger, of Unger Farms, said they are used to fi ghting summertime heat, but 100-degree days in June is “very unusual.” Unger Farms grows about 140 acres of blackberries, raspberries, strawberries and blueberries in Cornelius, Ore., 23 miles west of Portland. The fruit is all for fresh market, sold in New Seasons grocery stores, local farmers markets and U-pick. Harvest is mostly fi nished for June-bearing strawber- ries, Unger said. The farm also grows ever-bearing strawber- ries, which produce fruit from late May into November. Next up, Unger said, is blueberries. He said last week crews were to begin arriv- ing June 24 to pick the fruit, though with labor shortages he wondered how quickly they could get the work done. “Hopefully, we’ll have enough pickers show up,” he said. In the meantime, Unger said the farm has sprinkler sys- tems set up for both blueber- ries and cane berries, which they will use to beat the heat. Capital Press File Cattle graze in Idaho. USDA is off ering help to some Idaho ranchers in drought-stricken counties. Ranchers in drought stricken central Idaho qualify for USDA aid By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press USDA is making drought-related emergency assistance available to live- stock producers in Ida- ho’s Blaine and Lincoln counties. This is the second con- secutive low-water year in much of the central Idaho mountains. USDA in late June announced cost-share assistance is available under the Emergency Con- servation Program, which its Farm Service Agency administers. Areas of extreme drought, which the U.S. Drought Monitor labels D3, qualify. USDA said in an announcement that a lack of moisture over an extended period caused producers in Blaine and Lincoln counties to “suf- fer from the eff ects of severe drought conditions” and prompted program approval. Sam Bingham, FSA executive director for Jerome, Lincoln and Blaine counties, told Capital Press that Blaine hit D3 last fall, late in the 2020 qualifi ca- tion period, and remains in that category. Lincoln did not hit D3 last year and has not done so in 2021 to date. He said he included Lin- coln County in the request because producers there are impacted by Blaine County’s extreme drought upstream. The Emergency Con- servation Program cov- ers up to 75% of the cost of permanent mitigation work and half the cost of temporary measures. It is limited to $500,000 per person or legal entity per natural disaster. Only farms or ranches that had adequate livestock water- ing systems or facilities before the drought are eligible. USDA said there must be adequate range or pas- ture residue for livestock in the area to be served by a proposed water facility at the time of the request. Approved measures for making more water avail- able to livestock may include installing pipelines or other facilities, build- ing or deepening wells, and developing springs or seeps. Bingham said 10 to 30 producers applied when the program was available locally in past years. Pro- ducers this year should contact the local FSA offi ce promptly because many applicants and proj- ect types are expected, he said. The offi ce, at 310 W. Nez Perce Ave. in Jerome, will accept cost-share requests from July 1 to Aug. 15. Producers cannot start projects before fi ling a request and getting an on-site inspection. Information: 208-944- 3629 or samuel.bing- ham@usda.gov. 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