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    Deaconess Henderson Hospital Advisory Board gives $70,000 to local nonprofits

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    Two new honorees added to Juneteenth’s impact sign display

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    Wind turbine ordinance, which would be the first in Kentucky, is key to what ultimately occurs in Cordelio project

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    Macy talks socks,1978 UK champs and more during author visit to promote his book

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    Alliance dedicates new Henderson County Mine

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    A former Japanese tennis star champions Henderson County athletes

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    Stanley hopes his exhibition is a reminder ‘to be open to joyfulness…from whatever ridiculous source it may come’

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    Regional collaborative assists those suffering from mental health challenges with online resources

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    Plenty of baseball to watch without stepping into a big league stadium

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    Matthew 25 cuts the ribbon on new mobile sexual health unit

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    Two new honorees added to Juneteenth’s impact sign display

    Two new honorees added to Juneteenth’s impact sign display

    Wind turbine ordinance, which would be the first in Kentucky, is key to what ultimately occurs in Cordelio project

    Wind turbine ordinance, which would be the first in Kentucky, is key to what ultimately occurs in Cordelio project

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    Macy talks socks,1978 UK champs and more during author visit to promote his book

    Alliance dedicates new Henderson County Mine

    Alliance dedicates new Henderson County Mine

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    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

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    Summer blockbusters finally arrive in June

    Summer blockbusters finally arrive in June

    A former Japanese tennis star champions Henderson County athletes

    A former Japanese tennis star champions Henderson County athletes

    Stanley hopes his exhibition is a reminder ‘to be open to joyfulness…from whatever ridiculous source it may come’

    Stanley hopes his exhibition is a reminder ‘to be open to joyfulness…from whatever ridiculous source it may come’

    Henderson joins West Kentucky Film Commission with hopes of luring movie makers here

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    Regional collaborative assists those suffering from mental health challenges with online resources

    Plenty of baseball to watch without stepping into a big league stadium

    Plenty of baseball to watch without stepping into a big league stadium

    Matthew 25 cuts the ribbon on new mobile sexual health unit

    Matthew 25 cuts the ribbon on new mobile sexual health unit

    The Gnomes of Audubon Forest, a Henderson Tourist Commission initiative, is a scavenger hunt for all ages

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Home News Agriculture

Abnormal winter weather hurts summer peaches

Vince Tweddell by Vince Tweddell
August 16, 2023
in Agriculture, News
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Abnormal winter weather hurts summer peaches

Tim Alexander, proprietor of Cardinal Farms Peaches, gathers the tree-ripened fruit June 23, 2023. (Photo by Tyler Orsburn)

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Cardinal Farms owner Tim Alexander says this peach season has been especially strange—and difficult.

For one, only five of his 12 varieties produced any fruit, leaving this harvest as one of his smaller in recent memory. Alexander says he’s hoping to make 30% of what he does in a normal year, although it’s difficult to tell what’s normal anymore.

“I haven’t had a typical year in the last five or six years,” he says.

Alexander said the variety, Garnet Beauty, which is the first peach to ripen, usually at the end of June, was ready a full 10 days early on June 19.

The second variety, Redhaven, usually not ready until several days past Independence Day, were being picked on June 29.

He said that the variety of his peaches ripen in a certain order, so that when one variety finishes and there are no more left to pick, he knows the next will be ready soon.

“But this year it’s been very difficult to judge when things are going to be ready,” Alexander said.

Alexander stops short of blaming climate change. “Hard to say,” he says.

But he did point at the higher level of extreme weather—highs and lows, droughts and downpours—that have been making farming even more of a guessing game than ever, especially this year.

It started in December, Alexander said. Then, a weather shift from 65 degrees Fahrenheit to -4 in a matter of 36 hours did the first wave of damage.

“The trees themselves were dormant at the time,” Alexander said. “But they hadn’t had enough cold weather to really harden them off and it killed the vast majority of the fruit buds on the trees.”

Alexander said he wasn’t sure if that deep freeze had left any viable buds on the trees, but in late February, 80-degree days brought remaining buds out of dormancy.    Trees started blooming in March.   But then successive cold snaps wiped out those blooms, he said.

Later in March, a third flush of blooms arrived on his trees and that’s what produced his crop this year, he said.

“This is without a doubt the worst year I’ve had in the last decade,” Alexander said.

During early summer, the area was affected by six weeks of drought. And then in one weekend, close to 3 inches of rain fell. Alexander said that extreme weather is harsh on crops.

“Things like peaches will soak up that water very quickly and bust open,” he said. “And when the skin bursts open, it’s ruined and it’s no longer a marketable product.”

Another challenge are pests, particularly the brown marmorated stink bug, an invasive insect from Asia first coming to the U.S. in the 1990s, likely on a shipping container

“The stink bug has a hypodermic needle … and they stick that into a small, immature peach and suck out material from the peach,” Alexander said. “And then the peach grows around that wound and it’s a deformed peach. It’s no longer a marketable product.”

Alexander said a normal season runs into mid-September, lasting ten weeks. This year will probably be done by early August after five weeks, he said.

Alexander, who call himself a “peach nerd,” has been working in the orchard since he was 12 years old. Though he at one time was a corn and soybeans farmer, peaches have been his main source of income for the past 23 years, he said.

“Growing peaches kind of feeds my soul,” he said.

And so, despite the hardship, he’ll be back at it next year, like millions of farmers before him who’ve had a bad year.

“Farmers are pessimistic optimists,” he said. “They’ll tell you how bad it is and how bad they did this year. But by God, they’re going to do it again next year.”

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Vince Tweddell

Vince Tweddell

Vince Tweddell is the founder, publisher and editor of the Hendersonian.

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270 Cornhole players fare well at world competition

270 Cornhole players fare well at world competition

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