Spring 2018 Weather Confounds: Lack of Chill for Trees, Frost Damage in Grapes

Apr 23, 2018

Spring 2018 Weather Confounds: Lack of Chill for Trees, Frost Damage in Grapes

Apr 23, 2018

If you are a Foothill grower of apples or winegrapes you may see a lighter crop load come harvest time this year, but for very different reasons.  Apple bloom appears light, possibly due to a lack of chilling in February; while lows of 31°F in late March and mid April have caused some frost damage in some grape varieties.

Remember those 70°F days in early February? While you may have been basking in the California winter weather while your relatives back in the Midwest were freezing (sorry sisters!), our apple, pear, peach and nectarine trees weren't so happy.  That is because pome and stone fruits need a certain amount of chilling during the winter to release them from dormancy. 

Without this chilling, budbreak can appear erratic, weak and protracted, shoots bare, bloom extended and in some cases reduced.  This can make ripening uneven and difficult to manage, and in the worse case,
Cumulative chilling hours below 45degrees, Camino CIMIS.
reduce yield.

Chilling has historically been calculated by summing the hours below 45°F or the hours between 32°-45°F from November 1 through the end of February.  

When we look at the Camino CIMIS station's cumulative chilling hours below 45°F for 2017-2018, we can see that we reached only 855 chill hours during this time.  Chilling requirements for pome and stone fruits depend on the variety, but most apple varieties that are not "low-chill" will require between 500-1000 chilling hours below 45°F, while most grapes will need less than 200 chill hours. 

chillingportions
Recently, researchers have developed what they believe is a better model for calculating chilling, one that takes into account warm weather as well as cold and continues to accumulate into the year. The "chill portions" model for the Camino station is currently at just above 100 "portions" (Gold Delicious require about 50 "portions").  You can learn more about Chill calculators at our UC Fruit and Nut Center website here; or review Farm Advisor Katherine Pope's excellent presentation on chilliing that she gave at my Foothill Tree Fruit meeting a few years back here.

While February was unseasonably warm, late March and April has had some nights where temperatures have reached as low as 30-31°F.  Once plants break bud, all of their tissue is susceptible to frost damage.  Cold injury to grape green

tissue begins at air temperatures of 31°F for a duration of a half hour (note: the air temperature is standardized by being measured by a sheltered minimum thermometer four feet above the ground, as temperature can vary due to distance to the ground-the closer, the colder-and whether the station is sheltered).  Air temperatures of 26-28°F for a duration of several hours will kill the green growing parts.  Most often though, we see degrees of spring frost damage.  Shoot tips may be killed or damaged, but clusters that have not yet emerged may be OK.  

Frost damage actually occurs because of dehydration of the plant cells.  The cells are injured when their contents freeze and expand.  Later, the damaged cells can no longer control their liquid contents, so they dehydrate.

The degree of frost damage depends on a number of factors: how cold the tissue got (depending on your site microclimate, slope, aspect, etc.); whether there is bare ground, which will absorb and hold daytime heat, or a ground cover or cover crop, which can not hold daytime heat and may even harbor ice nucleating bacteria that allow freezing to occur at slightly higher temperatures.  The carbohydrate reserve that a vine has is also an important factor for susceptibility to frost injury.  A low carbohydrate reserve, due to a super vigorous variety or one which stays growing late into the fall, or those that suffer from water stress (which is why it is advised to water post-harvest if you can), can make a vine more susceptible to frost injury.  

Recently I observed variable frost damage in Viognier, Nebbiolo, Syrah and Gamay grape varieties growing in El Dorado County.  It is still a bit early to determine how much damage (damage to emerging clusters) was done.  Thankfully, basal buds and a "second crop" may come to the rescue!  Erratic, intensive weather patterns, whether they be cold or warm, appear to becoming more common.  Learning how to farm profitably during these uncertain times is but one of the challenges we face for our farming future.