Posted on 06/24/2008 5:17:50 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
Extreme weather has virtually wiped out Door Countys cherry crop for this year, which not only means slim pickings in orchards that attract thousands of tourists each summer, but also a loss of an estimated 350 to 400 seasonal jobs for workers who harvest and process the iconic scarlet fruit.
At a time when epic rains and flooding have wiped out berries and vegetables in other parts of the state, Door Countys loss may seem surprising because it is attributed to an opposite extreme: a three-month drought last summer, followed by a January that brought rain and wild temperature fluctuations. The countys 2008 cherry crop is expected to be an all-time record bust, taking a nosedive of at least 98% from last years bumper crop. Door County agriculture officials are exploring seeking a federal disaster declaration in hopes of receiving aid for orchards, many of which do not carry crop loss insurance.
The good news is that there should be enough cherries in reserve from last years crop for the legendary cherry pies that accompany Door County fish boils, though supplies could be limited and prices likely will be higher, orchard owners said Monday. The bad news is that there will be few cherries for tourists to pick. Roadside farm stands will still be open, but they wont feature many fresh cherries, if any.
Its devastating, said Jim Seaquist, a partner in his familys Seaquist Orchards in Sister Bay, which produces more than half of the countys tart cherries and about one-tenth of the lesser-known sweet cherries. My family has been in the cherry business for close to 100 years, and this has never happened before.
While the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates 200,000 pounds of tart cherries will be harvested, starting in mid-July, Seaquist estimates it will be closer to 100,000 pounds roughly 1% of last years crop of 10.4 million pounds. Well be competing with the birds to get much of anything, Seaquist said.
The sweet cherry crop, popular at roadside stands, is completely gone because those trees are more susceptible to weather extremes, growers said.
Theres no crop out there, said Glenn Musil, manager of Choice Orchards, five miles north of Sturgeon Bay on County HH just off Highway 42. Theres not one sweet cherry on our trees, and theres maybe half a pound of tart cherries per tree. Normally, there would be at least 20, if not 40 pounds of cherries on a tree, depending on the years crop.
Cherries have been integral to summertime in Door County for nearly a century. At one time, the county had 10,000 acres in cherry orchards. The number dropped in the mid-1960s and early 1970s to about 2,500 acres. Few mom-and-pop cherry orchards remain today, as modern, larger operations run by fewer farmers have made cherries go the way of Wisconsins dairy herds.
Seaquist, the fifth generation of family ownership, said his family will find a way to take care of Door County bakeries and restaurants that depend on local cherries. Were part of a larger cooperative in Michigan. What we dont have, well find somewhere, he said.
Several other top cherry-producing states are also expecting smaller crops after harsh weather last summer and winter, but Wisconsin appears to be hit the hardest, based on federal crop projections.
I feel for the growers, because the cherry business is a difficult business to begin with, said Andy Coulson, who with his wife, Jan, owns The White Gull Inn in Fish Creek. The cherry industry is a big part of Door Countys tourism, and anything that hurts one sector of tourism is felt by all of us. When people come to Door County, they may not experience a fish boil, but they see cherry pie everywhere.
In addition to capping fish boils with cherry pie, The White Gull Inn features cherries in breakfast pancakes, coffee cakes and its signature cherry-stuffed French toast. Weve been concerned since we heard about the crop losses, Coulson said.
Flower buds for this years crop formed last July and August. And when the flower buds opened this spring, most of them were empty, growers said.
Seaquist estimated his family orchards loss at $1 million, and said he expects insurance to cover maybe 40% of that.
The orchard also will not be able to employ about 20 local high school- and college-age students who traditionally depend on orchards for summer income, as well as 55 migrant workers from Texas, many of whom have worked at Seaquist orchards and its processing plant for the past 25 summers, Seaquist said.
Seaquist estimated the countys seasonal cherry industry work force at 350 to 400.
Whats left of the tart cherry crop will be handpicked to supply local markets, or left on trees for tourists who swamp Door County looking for a cherry-picking experience, growers said. There wont be much, if any, machine-picking, which is how the crop traditionally is harvested. That would cost more than the yield would produce.
The decline of this years crop is being attributed to several weather events. A severe drought last July through September weakened the trees as they were forming flower buds for this years crop. Then extreme fluctuations in January temperatures, plus unusual January rainfall, further harmed them, said Richard Weidman, superintendent of the Peninsular Agricultural Research Station near Sturgeon Bay.
Cherry grower David Schartner, of Schartners Farm Market in Egg Harbor, might have been the first grower to realize disaster was imminent in April.
He had knee surgery and wasnt able to work much around the farm, so he started examining his trees on a four-wheeler just to have something to do.
Schartner said he picked a few dormant branches from his 40 acres of cherries, mostly tart. When you put dormant wood in water, you can see flowers bloom out, Schartner said. Thats when he realized the buds were empty.
There have been other years of extreme temperatures, but for whatever reason, the past years weather spelled disaster, Seaquist said.
The only saving grace weve had is timely rainfall this spring to keep the trees alive and growing for next year, Weidman said. There should be cherries next year.
Quick! Stock up on canned cherries and cherry jam. Corner the market! ;)
Gardening & Foodie Ping!
My son has a cherry tree in his backyard, he told me this year’s fruit rotted before it ripened.
What cause the decrease? First there were the spring freezes, the worst for the time of the year in several decades. Then came the unseasonable cold days when the trees were blooming.
For those of you who are not familiar with fruit farming, most of the fruit that you eat is pollenated by bees. When the temperature is 55 degrees or below, the bees don't come out of their hives and the ones that do go out, many time, don't make it back.M
I have worked in agriculture for over 50 years. It is a labor of love. Sure, many make lots of money, others make a living. But, the risk is great. Far greater than going to Vegas and blowing your money on gambling.
As one farmer said that if he won a million on the lottery, he would farm until he went broke. Feciously speaking, it is the only business where you buy retail and sell wholesale.
Warm cherry pie from the oven piled with cold full cream cottage cheese will make you forget whatever it was.
I have three cherry trees, and I’m a long way SOUTH of Door County. My cherries are not doing all that well either, and this should’ve been the first year they produced decently. I have fruit on, but a lot of it is drying up. Lord knows we’ve had plenty of rain, but the ‘drying up’ comes from it not being pollinated completely.
Not to be crass, but the tree knows when to ‘abort’ the fruit because it’ll never ripen properly.
I manage a Garden Center and have customers in all the time that have poor pollination on fruit trees. So what do I do? I sell them yet another fruit tree to boost pollination.
One can never bee too rich, too thin, or have too many pollinators in the garden. :)
Global Raining will be the death of us all!
How can they? They'd look like complete fools .... oh, nevermind.
Midwest PING alert!
Don’t bees do the pollination?
Yes, bees are a good pollinator. But so are the wind and birds and other flying insects. They’re all pollen “carriers.” And if you’re REALLY obsessed with breeding your fruit, you can take a Q-tip and...well, it’s not something to discuss in Polite Company. ;)
BUT...with Cherries and Pears and Apples and a few other fruit trees you need to have another tree of a DIFFERENT variety in the immediate area so cross-pollination can happen.
Compare having no other variant tree in the area to kissing your First Cousin...
...never a good idea, LOL!
I went cherry picking yesterday (Sweet cherries) in southern MI.
Most of the sweet cherry crop was damaged during a late frost in April. I had to pay 1.75 a lb! Outrageous I thought, but I still picked and paid.
The sour cherry crop is looking like is suffered minimal damage.
If you’d like to be on or off this Upper Midwest/outdoors/rural list please FR mail me. And ping me is you see articles of interest.
It is looking like a tough year in crops for many parts of the state.
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