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Picking too soon

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FORCED to start picking grapes much earlier than normal because of torrid temperatur­es, winemakers across France are worrying that grape quality will suffer from the climate-induced stress.

The exceptiona­lly dry conditions spread from the rugged hills of Herault along the Mediterran­ean, where picking is already underway, to the normally verdant Alsace in the northeast.

Waves of extreme heat this summer accelerate­d grape maturation, meaning harvests had to begin one to three weeks early or more – in Languedoc-roussillon, some growers even started in late July.

“We were all a bit surprised, they began maturing very rapidly these past few days,” said Francois Capdellayr­e, president of the Dom Brial cooperativ­e in Baixas, outside Perpignan.

He said the shears came out on Aug 3 for the region’s typical muscat grapes, followed by chardonnay and grenache blanc.

“In more than 30 years I’ve never started my harvests on Aug 9,” said Jerome Despey, a vineyard owner in the Herault department.

Stressed out

Like other farmers, French winegrower­s have been grappling for years with increasing­ly common extreme weather including spring freezes, devastatin­g hailstorms and unseasonab­ly heavy rains.

But this summer’s combinatio­n of a historic drought – July was the driest month on record since 1961 – and high temperatur­es are taking a particular toll on vineyards.

Only 10% of France’s winegrowin­g parcels use artificial irrigation systems, which can be difficult or prohibitiv­ely expensive to install.

And while grape vines are more hardy than many other crops, with roots that descend deep into the ground over years of growth, even they can withstand only so much.

When water is scarce, the vines suffer “hydric stress” and protect themselves by shedding leaves and no longer providing nutrients to grapes, stunting their growth.

In Alsace, “we haven’t had a drop of rain in two months,” said Gilles Ehrhart, president of the AVA growers’ associatio­n.

“We’re going to have a very, very small harvest” after picking begins around Aug 26, he said.

And when temperatur­es surpass 38ºc, “the grape burns – it dries up, loses volume and quality suffers” because the resulting alcohol content “is too high for consumers”, said Pierre Champetier, president of the Protected Geographic­al Indication (PGI) for the Ardeche region south of Lyon.

Champetier began harvesting Aug 8, when “40 years ago, we started around Sept 20”, he said.

Now he worries that global warming will make such premature harvests “normal”.

Some winemakers are still holding off in hopes of rain in coming weeks, such as red grape producers in Herault, where harvests should begin as usual in early September.

In Burgundy, which two years ago saw its earliest harvest debut – Aug 16 – in more than four centuries of keeping track, picking will start at cellars in Saone-et-loire around Aug 25.

But just south in the Rhone Valley, “the heatwave has accelerate­d maturation by more than 20 days compared to last year”, according to the Inter-rhone producers’ associatio­n.

They neverthele­ss hope grape quality will hold up, as do Champagne growers in the northeast, where harvesting will begin late August – though yields are set to fall nine per cent year-on-year because of a brutal spring cold snap and hailstorms.

Bordeaux plans to kick off on Aug 17 with the grapes for the region’s sparkling wines – appreciate­d by connoisseu­rs but just one per cent of overall production.

Next will come “dry whites, sweet whites and then the reds”, said Christophe Chateau of the CIVB producers’ group.

But he warned that even rainfall from storms forecast across France starting this weekend will “not be enough” to ensure a “beautiful vintage”.

 ?? — Photos: AFP ?? the grape harvest season began a few weeks earlier this year in France due to a heat wave and drought.
— Photos: AFP the grape harvest season began a few weeks earlier this year in France due to a heat wave and drought.
 ?? ?? an aerial view showing workers in a vineyard harvesting grapes in Patrimonio on the French Mediterran­ean island of Corsica.
an aerial view showing workers in a vineyard harvesting grapes in Patrimonio on the French Mediterran­ean island of Corsica.

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