Freezing temperatures have citrus farmers taking steps to protect their crops

Sunday, December 27, 2015
Freezing temperatures have citrus farmers taking steps to protect their crops
The hard freeze has valley citrus growers concerned about their fruit, once again.

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- The hard freeze has valley citrus growers concerned about their fruit, once again. Many will be up all night taking steps to protect those valuable crops.

When it gets this cold Manuel Cunha doesn't just turn the water on to protect his citrus from the freeze. He checks his sprinklers closely for any malfunctions, caused by coyotes or even a little bit of dirt. "You gotta be on top of it because if you only have so much water and you have to move the water from block to block, you gotta make sure that when you move it you shut one block down, watching it that it doesn't freeze, so you can go back to it with the water again."

Cunha expects overnight lows in the 20's at his 55-acre Fresno County citrus ranch, it concerns him. But he said a grower only has two options to protect the citrus by raising the temperature-- water and wind.

While Cunha will be up all night surveying his sprinklers, valley homeowners are protecting their pipes. Buying basic products, such as foam tubing. "You've got water under pressure, and then the water freezes and expands and cracks the pipe and now you've got water shooting out," explains Kevin Seubert, Fresno AG Hardware

When it gets this cold the last thing you want is a home flooded with cold water.

The cold is the concern right now, but even in the spring hail can threaten citrus. Cunha said farmers raising vegetables like broccoli and cabbage also are in for a hard night and should cover their crops with plastic.