Not enough water shrinks the crop
By Colleen Cronin /
ecoRI News staff
Severe drought conditions that lasted through most of the summer took a bite out of some local orchards’ harvest, producing smaller apples than past seasons.
Jan Eckhart, owner of Sweet Berry Farm in Middletown, said his
orchard grew smaller, more flavorful apples this year after low rainfall in
July and August. The weather impacted Empire and Macoun apples the most, he
said.
“Some of them didn’t size up,” he said, adding that “they ripened a little bit earlier, so the season was earlier than usual.”
The dry weather hasn’t just impacted
apples: drought can affect a number of fall features, including turning leaves earlier in the season or ruining seasonal harvests.
And as climate change causes more extreme weather in Rhode Island, oscillating
between extreme precipitation and drought, farmers will have to try to work
around recurring problems.
Eckhart said his orchard doesn’t have an
irrigation system and this summer’s weather made him nervous that his harvest
might not survive, but heavy soil was the key to making it through.
John Steere’s apples at Steere
Orchard in Smithfield did a little bit better.
“We fared pretty well with the drought,”
Steere said. “When it was really hot and dry, a few apples started to drop a
little bit.” Despite a few casualties, this season’s apples were still big, he
said.
Steere also doesn’t irrigate his
orchard, which sits on top of a hill, but like at Sweet Berry, some heavy soil
made a huge difference.
Last weekend, Steere even opened a new
section of the orchard for visitors to pick their own apples.
Emily Alexander, a baker at Phantom
Farms in Cumberland, said the dry season not only created
smaller apples for her pastries, but it also brought more bees into the
orchards, which can be good and bad.
The bees pollinate the apples, but
sometimes also sting the pickers.
Phantom Farms warned customers about the
tiny insects and small apples, but Alexander said she hadn’t heard any
complaints, just that the apple pastries had been baking a little faster.
Colleen Cronin is a Report
for America corps member who writes about environmental issues in rural Rhode
Island for ecoRI News.