The Borneo Post

Cranberry farmers fight climate change to protect Thanksgivi­ng

- Joe Prezioso and Nicolas Revise Mary McCaffrey

We had drought all summer... Then late in the summer we had torrential downpours, (which) caused flooding, and the flooding causes fungal infections. Too much rain all at once is a problem. Not enough rain most of the season was another problem. Put them together it’s a double whammy.

Keith Mann

TAUNTON, United States: American farmers growing cranberrie­s, a quintessen­tial component of Thanksgivi­ng feasts, have had to adapt their traditiona­l methods to fight the effects of climate change.

The tart red berries, boiled with a heaping dose of sugar to make classic cranberry sauce, thrive only in the right environmen­t – but climate change threatens to make conditions more unpredicta­ble and extreme.

A er a terrible 2021 season, Massachuse s farmer Billy McCaffrey is ecstatic for a bumper crop this year.

“Phenomenal, unbelievab­le,” the 70-year-old former teacher says, surrounded up to his waist by a sea of floating berries.

His cranberry farm, south of Boston, is one of hundreds in the northeaste­rn US state of Massachuse s – the second largest producer a er midwestern Wisconsin.

“Every year is up and down... I just hope we can keep it and get paid,” says McCaffrey, worrying that an unexpected hail storm could still cause disaster for him and his wife Mary.

The McCaffreys had worried that 2022 could see a repeat of the previous year, which the head of the Cape Cod Cranberry Growers Associatio­n (CCCGA), Brian Wick, says was ‘one of our worst crops in quite some time’.

“The rains and the environmen­t in the vine canopy created the perfect conditions for rot (and) fungus” the expert told AFP.

‘Double Whammy’

This year’s growing season started with a drought, the exact opposite of last year, but farmers were able to use pumps and water to keep their crops alive.

That eats into their bo om line.

Now this year looks like one of the biggest crops ever with a prediction of 1.9 million barrels produced in Massachuse s according to the CCCGA.

Keith Mann, 54, has outfi ed his large farm in Buzzards Bay,

Massachuse s, with solar panels to help offset fuel costs.

He has also installed several windmills on his property and sells electricit­y back to the grid.

Though he’s not sure the average temperatur­es have noticeably increased, Mann says the ‘weather extremes cause real troubles for us’.

“We had drought all summer... Then late in the summer we had torrential downpours,

(which) caused flooding, and the flooding causes fungal infections.”

“Too much rain all at once is a problem. Not enough rain most of the season was another problem. Put them together it’s a double whammy,” said Mann.

As for this year’s Thanksgivi­ng and those in the relative near future, Americans don’t need to rush and stock up on cranberry

sauce just yet.

Farmers are adapting to the changing climate and producing new varieties to be processed by the massive Ocean Spray farm cooperativ­e in Massachuse s.

“Thanksgivi­ng, we get up for that. It drives us” said McCaffrey.

“You’re going to have to change your technique and tweak it a li le bit at a time.”

 ?? By Joseph Prezioso s. — AFP photos ?? Cranberrie­s grow in a healthy section of a cranberry bog at Spring Rain Farm in Taunton, Massachuse
By Joseph Prezioso s. — AFP photos Cranberrie­s grow in a healthy section of a cranberry bog at Spring Rain Farm in Taunton, Massachuse
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? McCaffrey uses her phone to monitor cranberry bog temperatur­es with the help of field monitors and computers, at her farm.
McCaffrey uses her phone to monitor cranberry bog temperatur­es with the help of field monitors and computers, at her farm.
 ?? ?? Workers use cranberry booms in a flooded bog to coral floating cranberrie­s to a pump as they are harvested at Mann Farms in Buzzards Bay.
Workers use cranberry booms in a flooded bog to coral floating cranberrie­s to a pump as they are harvested at Mann Farms in Buzzards Bay.

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