Skip to main content
Global Edition
Sunday, May 19, 2024

cold snap

Credit: WTVQ Lexington, KY
Duration: 0 shares 1 views

cold snap
cold snap
Impact on plants

Weekend's unusually cold temperatures.

Many farmers, gardeners, and greenhouses fear some of their crops and plants won't survive the expected hard freeze.

The potential losses could be in the millions of dollars...which is money we won't see in local economies already struggling during this pandemic.

Abc 36's christy bollinger has more on what this late blast of winter could cost us.

Uk expert "it has the potential to give us about a 30-million dollar loss across kentucky."

That's a staggering financial hit on an economy already crippled by the pandemic.

Uk expert "you're looking at not just the loss of revenue but you're looking at the loss of supply that will trickle down into the food market as well."

Which means you'll pay the price at the grocery store.

U-k extension professor, chad lee, says the timing is terrible because wheat is at a stage where it's most sensitive to cold temps.

Uk expert "right now is when it's making the seed so everything up to this point was to get us to where we could get a yield."

And the potential of losing that yield... would be devastating for wheat farmer john james... who has around 85-acres of wheat out right now.

Farmer "you'd be looking at about a 32,000 dollars gross revenue loss."

James planted in the fall... and the crop is just days away from flowering... but if the freeze happens...all of that hard work will be for nothing.

Farmer "there's virtually nothing we can do to protect against weather incidents."

Unlike for greenhouse nurseries... like springhouse gardens in jessamine county.

Greenhouse "pretty much everything that has any kind of tender growth or any kind of flower is gonna have to go under what we call frost blankets or tobacco cloth."

Like what you see here...but not everything can be covered...so some have to go inside poly-houses... which isn't ideal since customers can't shop in there.

Greenhouse "so this is gonna really hurt our sales these next four or five days."

Which owner richard weber says is terrible timing..

Since the weekend of mother's day is their biggest time.

"this is the super bowl of garden centers the week between derby day and mother's day.

This is when we do about 30% of all of our business."

He encourages gardeners to cover up what they can... and if possible, bring plants inside.

Weber says here's to hoping for the best... for all.

Christy bollinger, abc 36 news.

More coronavirus cases

You might like

Related news coverage

Advertisement