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Freaky weather leaves fruit bowl bitter

K.S. Sudhi

Farmers say rain patterns changed and heat unprecedented


Kanthalloor experiencing major weather changes

Flowering season of apples too changed


KANTHALLOOR (Idukki district): Rain, mist and the wintry weather have become unpredictable here. The changing weather patterns have started affecting life at an altitude of over 5,000 ft above sea level. Is climate change to blame?

Kanthalloor, the only winter vegetable and fruit-growing centre of Kerala, bordering Tamil Nadu, is experiencing unprecedented weather changes.

Apple, strawberry, orange, cherimoya, plum, guava, gooseberry, peach and passion fruit… The fruit bowl of the hill station is rich and diverse. Cauliflower, cabbage, carrot, beans, potato, beetroot and garlic are the vegetables cultivated. Early settlers remember that most of their lives were drenched in rain and draped in mist. And life was hard at the dizzy heights.

Rain played a major role in their lives. It used to rain for eight months together during the early 1980s, remembers G.P. Ajith, planter.

“The cracking sound of frost on wet grass used to greet us when stepping out from the warm interiors of the houses. But rain and mist have thinned and temperature has gone up over the years,” he says. The variations in weather have influenced fruit production, be it in the quantity or the size, he said while plucking a strawberry from his orchard.

The flowering season of apple and many other fruit trees has changed. Apple trees used to bloom in February, indicating the beginning of spring.

The trees used to be weighed down by fruits during the harvest season, he says. P.K. Thankaraj, former chieftain of the Perumalayar, near Kanthalloor, says the unprecedented rain last year had affected garlic farming. “Three crops of garlic were damaged in the rain and I have never seen such inclement weather earlier,” says the 70-year-old farmer. The rain patterns have changed and there is unprecedented heat, he says.

S. Krishna Pillai, farmer, says the plum trees now flower ahead of schedule.

They used to flower in March. But this year, the flowering started in November. Sadly, the flowers are decaying in the rain and there will be a dip in fruit production, Mr. Pillai fears. The average production from a tree used to be around 2 quintals and this has dropped considerably.

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