Crops and vines decimated by april frosts in france

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COLD SNAP IS PREDICTED TO CONTINUE UNTIL END OF WEEK, WHEN A CÉVENOL STORM WILL SWEEP ACROSS COUNTRY Vineyards and farms around France have seen crops destroyed, as a bitter cold snap


continues and winter-like weather is set to last until the end of the week. In some parts of eastern France, up to 90% of vines have been wiped out by frosts, after unseasonably warm


temperatures in the spring were followed by the cold snap.  Morning temperatures well below zero for several days in a row have killed off early blooming buds.  Read more: PHOTOS: Sudden


hailstorm turns French Riviera towns white “Everything froze [over the last few days],” said winemaker Cyril Raveau from the Côte-d'Or department. “This year, we're going to


harvest maybe 10% of a normal crop,” he added. His vineyard usually makes 60,000 bottles of wine annually, but will struggle to make 6,000 this year “if he is lucky,” he told France3. Colder


temperatures will continue for the rest of the week, particularly in the east.  In the Pyrénées, the low temperatures have brought snowfall usually only seen for winter time to the mountain


range, with heavy snow falling at altitudes as low as 800m. > ❄️ De fortes averses de neige tombent dès 800 à 1000m dans les > Pyrénées ce 23 avril. Images depuis Ax-les-Thermes en 


Ariège. > (via @Viewsurf) pic.twitter.com/WqTmYSfxRB > — Météo Express (@MeteoExpress) April 23, 2024 A fierce cévenol storm – the seventh already this year – is predicted for the


weekend, however temperatures will return to April averages at the same time. These are particularly fierce storms caused by warm Mediterranean air pushing up against the foothills and


mountains of the Massif Central or southern Alps. Combined with another storm from the Atlantic, storms will cover much of France, particularly the south-west and centre, bringing heavy rain


and lightning. Read more: Why are temperatures yo-yoing in France? CAN BE ‘TOO EXPENSIVE’ TO PROTECT CROPS DESPITE RISKS Plants, crops, and especially vines, have started to wake up and


begin to flower earlier than usual in recent years because of unseasonably warm spring weather, making them more susceptible to late frosts.  These April frosts are not uncommon, however


farmers and winemakers do not know in advance how severe they will be so it can be difficult to predict when crops need to be protected.  This is especially true for smaller producers, where


profit margins are too thin to protect against all eventualities. “[The vineyard] is not insured…It's quite difficult to take out insurance because frost happens [roughly] every other


year,” Mr Raveau said. During cold spells, many vineyards use traditional methods to keep vines warm, which include the burning of thousands of torches continually throughout the cold nights


close to the plants. It makes for impressive photos but can be too expensive even for a smaller vineyard.  “It's complicated. The costs are too high, between €3,000 and €4,000 per


hectare. Even if we wanted to, we'd only protect one or two hectares out of the whole,” Mr Raveau said.