Recent cold weather may damage locally-grown fruit and raise prices

03/04/2011
By Victoria Schlesinger

Just as many Central Valley fruit trees began to bloom, temperatures dropped last week, potentially harming many fruit and nut trees at a particularly vulnerable time. In particular stone fruit, such as peaches, apricots, and plums are susceptible to frost. But farmers won’t know the extent of the damage until harvest time. Buyers will find out when they look at the prices. [Marin Independent Journal]

Tags: agriculture, central valley, cold temperatures, farmers market, frost damage, fruit

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Featured Video

A parody of Alicia Keys and Jay-Z's hit "Empire State of Mind," this short video will show at the San Francisco Green Film Festival March 3-6, 2011. sfgreenfilmfest.org

Follow Us!

Recent Comments

Frank: Information you might need on desalination $500 per acre foot for drinki...
sdm: Desalination has its inherent problems and dealing with the retentate salts...
serge dm: Desalination has its inherent problems and dealing with the retentate salts...
serge dm: It is obvious that this is a hot button topic and both sides have passionat...
theo: The environmentalists are actually doing the city of San Francisco a favor....
Professor Bobo: The single lawn mower occurrence happened in the 80's, yet the enviro-menta...
Bern: Urban farming should be encouraged. It's a positive aspect.Water use is at ...
whome: have you ever even been there??? i go to the park all time. i go every sund...
Bern: More trees(coniferous and deciduous trees)should be regenerated across the ...
eric: Dumbest thing ive ever heard. Our state is in a budget deficit and an envi...

Field Notes Blog

UC Berkeley study: Using fear backfires on climate change

It’s been a point of maddening frustration for scientists and environmentalists that as the predictions on global warming grow more dire, the public seems...
Read more »

A storm of biblical proportions

It’s been a long, cold rainy winter this year in California. But it could get worse — much worse. The USGS warned this past...
Read more »

Hidden Treasure: An Eco-City in San Francisco Bay?

Listen to WOW reporter Alison Hawkes’ radio story about the greening of Treasure Island, which aired on KQED’s California Watch.
Read more »

Got News?

Send story tips or news items for The Daily Catch:

[email protected]

We want to hear from you!

Who we are

Way Out West is a news site for the Bay Area dedicated to daily coverage of local green news.

We're camping out at public meetings, traipsing through parks, and sticking our noses into green tech research to bring you relevant local stories that matter.

WOW is produced by two local environmental journalists for you, our eco-savvy readers. We'd love to hear what you want from this site.