© 2025 | Jefferson Public Radio
Southern Oregon University
1250 Siskiyou Blvd.
Ashland, OR 97520
541.552.6301 | 800.782.6191
Listen | Discover | Engage a service of Southern Oregon University
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Northwest Farmers Worry As Fruit Buds 'Push' Early

Workers prune back grape vines at McNary Vineyard outside of Plymouth, Washington. CREDIT: ANNA KING

Listen

East of the Cascades in Washington and Oregon, it’s been about five to 10 degrees warmer than normal for most of the winter. Those unusually warm conditions have buds on fruit trees and grapevines starting to “push,” or emerge early.

And that has farmers worried.

Crews have already started pruning at the McNary Vineyard on the Washington bluffs of the Columbia River. Around 30 men are pruning the vines, carefully leaving two buds on each spur for the fruit’s fresh growth to emerge.

Vineyard General Manager David Forsyth explained that the warm winter is starting to swell buds with water and sap. That means they can be more easily damaged by coming cold snaps.

“Will that be an issue or not? We don’t know,” Forsyth said. “We do have wind machines here to help us move the air around if we does get cold.”

Forsyth said he hopes to get some consistent cold weather that slows the buds’ development, keeping them hardier longer.

Forsyth also said that it’s been harder in recent years to assemble and keep a crew every year, so they started back in January.

“There’s more vineyards going in. More orchards going in,” he said. “Certainly the immigration issues get tougher every year.”

They are doing more at the vineyard with machines. But it will still take this crew a month and a half to prune all 660 acres.

Copyright 2018 Northwest News Network 

Related Stories:

Fighting For Compensation: How Well Is L&I Hearing Latino Farmworkers?

Six years ago, Jose Luis Mendoza lost part of his left leg, and with it, the ability to work as a farm laborer. He now has a lawyer trying to help him get full compensation from the Washington state Department of Labor and Industries. Continue Reading Fighting For Compensation: How Well Is L&I Hearing Latino Farmworkers?

Read More »

Esmy Jimenez

January 5, 2018

International Push Aims To Put More Pulse Crops On Your Table

Asparagus hummus at Black Cypress restaurant in Pullman. The 2016 International Year of the Pulse aims to put more of the crops — chickpeas,… Continue Reading International Push Aims To Put More Pulse Crops On Your Table

Read More »

Courtney Flatt

May 23, 2016

StoryCorps Northwest: Brains and Brawn, Farming In The Yakima Valley

Charlie de la Chapelle (L) Cragg Gilbert (R) CREDIT STORYCORPS Listen When you think of farming in America, you may think of golden fields,… Continue Reading StoryCorps Northwest: Brains and Brawn, Farming In The Yakima Valley

Read More »

Sueann Ramella

August 28, 2013

Copyright 2018 Northwest Public Broadcasting

Anna King loves unearthing great stories about people in the Northwest. She reports for the Northwest News Network, a journalism collaboration of public radio stations in Washington and Oregon that includes JPR.
Congress and the President have spoken. While this is a devastating result, JPR's commitment to its mission and values and our resolve to achieve them remain stronger than ever. Together with NPR, we’ll continue to bring you rigorous journalism, local news, courageous storytelling, and inspired music – every day. Help us increase listener support by 25% to make up for lost federal funding.