Bad weather dealt a heavy blow to Georgia peach crops
By
Sam Gringlas |
NPR
Thursday, June 1, 2023
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Georgia peaches will be harder to find this summer. Bad weather pretty much wiped out this year's crop.
Transcript
AILSA CHANG, HOST:
Summer is around the corner. And in Georgia, summer means peaches. But roughly 90% of the Peach State's crop has been destroyed. As WABE's Sam Gringlas reports from Atlanta, weather and climate are to blame.
SAM GRINGLAS, BYLINE: The last time things were this bad was 1955. That's according to Lawton Pearson of Pearson Farm in Fort Valley, Ga.
LAWTON PEARSON: I didn't see it. I wasn't alive. My dad was only 6. My grandfather picked two peaches, and they went to California for the summer.
GRINGLAS: Peaches require a minimum number of chill hours below 45 degrees to set fruit, but the first three months of this year were the warmest on record in Georgia. And chill hours here have been declining over the years. That is climate change. Growers are experimenting with new varieties that need fewer chill hours. Some of those did get the cold they needed, but right when they were blooming, a spurt of unlucky freezing weather.
PEARSON: You have a low chill peach that was perfectly fine with this winter, so it bloomed. And then it got four nights under 28 - can't win either way.
GRINGLAS: So don't count on sinking your teeth into a peach from the Peach State anytime soon.
PEARSON: Not Georgia peaches. I don't think you'll see Georgia peaches in a grocery store.
GRINGLAS: Pearson's summer staff will be down to 40 from the typical 250. He can't retreat to California like his grandfather did in '55. The business has diversified, including a growing pecan crop. But Pearson says looking at trees with no peaches is painful.
PEARSON: Oh, God. Yeah.
GRINGLAS: One bright spot - the few that do make it benefit from having all the sun, water and nutrients to themselves.
PEARSON: The peaches you're left with sometimes are fantastic. And they're huge, and they're sweeter. And we're like, the peaches we have are awesome. It just leaves you wanting more.
GRINGLAS: Pearson is ready for August, when peach season is over and he can look to next year. For NPR News, I'm Sam Gringlas in Atlanta.
(SOUNDBITE OF NICK KINGSWELL'S "HOMESICK") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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