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Grower anticipates a respectable crop size as harvest begins early

China Agriculture Report By CnAgriChina Agriculture Report Print

Trusted farming industry news for : commodity information, growing analysis, news, and grape production trends

This year’s crop has also been favored by the lack of any extended spells of really hot weather. “We only had a day or two when the temperature rose to around 108 to 110 degrees,” he says. “The latest forecast predicts temperatures no higher than about 85 to the low 90s through September. So, we shouldn’t have any excessive heat through harvest.”

If all goes well, Wilt expects to have his tray dried raisins safely inside bins by Sept. 20. In some years, that date can be significant. It’s the deadline when grapes must be picked and laid on drying trays to qualify for any rain insurance benefits.

While harvest prospects look bright, the water situation remains bleak. Except for one delivery of surface water in late June and early July, growers in his irrigation district have relied on groundwater to irrigate their fields.

“The water table is dropping relatively fast because everyone is using well water this year,” Wilt says. “It’s not a pretty picture.”

Three years ago his water table stood 40 to 45 feet below the surface. It’s since declined to a depth of around 80 to 85 feet. Earlier this year, a well on some rented land had to be deepened to 200 feet. That was when the bowls began sucking air just three months after they had been lowered from 70 feet to 85 feet.

“It’s about a one-year wait around here to get a well drilled,” he says.

The quality of the water he’s pumping from the ground is another concern. He’s starting to pick up levels of boron and salts that he hasn’t seen before.

Except for one field which he sprayed to treat for mites and another to control leafhoppers in late June, insect pressure in his vineyards has been light this year, he adds.

“If it wasn’t for the drought concerns, this has been a decent season for growing grapes in terms of weather, insect and disease threats,” Wilt says. “It takes a lot more time and planning when you’re irrigating just 10 acres a day using well water than when I could irrigate 30 to 40 acres in a day with district water.”

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