Showing posts with label heat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heat. Show all posts

Sunday 11 July 2021

Third heatwave hits California

Miguel Ramos, of Salem, Oregon, reaches up to pull the leaf canopy over pinot noir grapes on Thursday, July 8, 2021, to shade the fruit from the sun, at Willamette Valley Vineyards in Turner, Ore. (AP Photo/Andrew Selsky)


People started to prepare for the third record-breaking heatwave of the season throughout the West coast. Workers in several West Coast wineries are trimming less of the leaf canopy to keep the grapes shaded and prevent sunburn.

Temperatures have soared into the triple digits in California, Arizona and Nevada. Hundreds of deaths have been recorded as attributable to the heat. OSHA adopted a heatwave standard to protect outdoor workers from heat-related illness. Oregon and Washington were among the first states to adopt the new OSHA emergency rule for employees working in extreme heat.

Meanwhile, in the Atlantic, TS Elsa, which had been the first hurricane of the season, fizzled as it brought heavy rains and flooding to the US East Coast. Compared to last year, it has been a most unusually quiet season in the Atlantic. It's almost like waiting for the fuse to reach the powder keg. 




Scientists say human-induced climate change is definitely what is causing the West Coasts' disastrous heat and drought. Meanwhile, scientists also believe that anthropomorphic climate change was also at fault of the 'catastrophic' French frost that decimated one-third of the crop in Burgundy, Champagne and the Loire valley. The frost also affected our growing region and everything is about a month late  this year. 

For us, it's been an unusually cold and dry early summer, so the grapes still have not flowered. But everything started growing exponentially last week and the grass definitely benefited from its first trim in a while. Alex is getting used to the new Kubota UTV which purrs along quietly at slow speed. The mower machine is separately petrol-powered and very annoyingly loud. I hope the one we ordered is more environmentally friendly. But now that we have this UTV, Alex has mowed the vineyard, the field, and even deployed the lobster pots using the UTV to deliver them to our boat, Moytura. And the benefits are already evident. 😎




Tuesday 2 June 2020

Drought in Ireland


 
The five-year-old Rondo vines are loaded with clusters

Weather prediction is about to become more accurate in Ireland, just at a time when there's little weather to report. We have not had any rain in ages and have been watering daily, but not in the vineyard. I hope the vines can survive the drought we are experiencing.

The three-year-old Solaris vines are looking good. 

The earth is parched and the leaves that blew off the trees in the last storm are so dry that everywhere you take a step outdoors is crunchy underfoot. The cats are actually scaring themselves with the noise. This is a truly unusual situation for us. Midday is silent as the cats take siestas in the shade of the trees, birds stop flying and even the insects settle down somewhere. There are many more insects this year than last -- all different kinds including many butterflies flitting about. Everyone is coming to the oasis to drink and bathe but the water level is way down.

It's looking pretty good for no rain in weeks. 
The hottest day of the year so far was yesterday and reported in Furnace, Newport just a few miles from here at 26.9C. Irish Water is about to restrict watering and there's little respite in the forecast. So all we can do is pray and go paddling around Clew Bay. It's gorgeous out there and much cooler on the water. See you later.

Croagh Patrick, the Holy mountain

Nephin range with Ross in the foreground

The head of the inlet 


Our house in the centre

Our village of Ross

Croagh Patrick as clouds arrive

Beautiful but no rain