Jeff Sandness鈥 farm is filled with tools you鈥檇 expect 鈥 things like trucks and tractors. But nestled near rows of dormant apple trees and sweet cherries, there鈥檚 something a bit more eye-catching: a massive propane-powered frost fan.
It鈥檚 a curious sight, a windmill-like contraption, popping above a quiet winter farmscape in northeastern 黑料吃瓜网. But as Sandness powers it up, the fan鈥檚 purpose becomes clear: It moves warm air around.
鈥淪eem a little strange standing under a helicopter?鈥 Sandness jokes, as the fan spins above.
Around him, grass shakes and plants sway from the air. On cold spring nights, the device could be a lifesaver for his crops as it gently raises the ambient air temperature to protect his fruit from devastating spring frosts.
鈥淚t will keep rotating very slowly,鈥 Sandness said as the fan noisily rattled and rotated overhead. 鈥淭akes about five minutes to go around the circle 鈥 just creeping around really slow.鈥
Last year was a tough one for 黑料吃瓜网 farmers. From late-spring frosts to devastating summer floods, 2023 was the latest in a string of wild weather. And .
On Sandness鈥 farm in Eastford, subzero February temperatures wiped out his 2023 peach crop. Temperatures then warmed up, but in May, a freak frost stuck around for a few extra hours overnight, damaging his crop of delicate young apples.
鈥淪pring can鈥檛 come earlier and then go away,鈥 Sandness said. 鈥淭hat becomes the issue that we're facing as far as getting through the spring and freezing weather.鈥
鈥楾here鈥檚 no time to breathe鈥
Even a few degrees of temperature variation is a big deal for fruit farmers in the Northeast, said Evan Lentz, an assistant extension educator at UConn.
鈥淭hat can really mean the difference between life and death for some of these fruit crops,鈥 he said.
On a cold blustery day, Lentz walked among rows of dormant mcintosh apples and sweet cherries on Sandness鈥 farm. Lentz, who consults with farmers across the state, said the recent wild weather was on lots of their minds.
鈥淭he major consideration is like, where do you put your time and your money, especially when your crop is already so compromised,鈥 he said.
As the growing season progressed, Lentz said some farmers would spray to protect their crops from pests, only to see torrential summer rains wash away all that work.
鈥淎nd then you have to consider, is it worth going out again, spending more money, just to get the spray on, so it鈥檚 actually effective? Or do I just let it go?鈥 Lentz said.
Farmers are asking these questions more and more, said Bryan Hurlburt, head of the 黑料吃瓜网 Department of Agriculture.
鈥淭he challenge that the weather and the climate has posed over the past couple of years is there's no break,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here's no time to breathe and say, 鈥榃hat are we going to do next? How do we pivot from here?鈥欌
Since Hurlburt took over the agency in March 2019, the state has requested five federal disaster declarations after weather wiped out crops.
Extreme weather 鈥榩retty scary鈥 for farmers
Drought and severe rain are driving most of those requests, said Julie Fine, New England鈥檚 climate and agriculture specialist for American Farmland Trust. Farmers are getting overwhelmed by the ping-pong between these climate extremes, she said.
鈥淧eople feel like they're having to prepare for two extremes instead of one extreme. And that's pretty scary for a lot of people,鈥 Fine said.
Across the region, farmers are adapting their fields, installing irrigation or drainage as needed and some are putting up buildings to protect their crops.
鈥淚nstalling a lot of high tunnels and greenhouses just trying to get a little more control over the environment,鈥 Fine said.
Farmers are also changing their sales tactics to adapt, Hurlburt said.
鈥淭hey try to do different things across multiple seasons, so that they're not necessarily relying on one good time of year for all their sales,鈥 Hurlburt said.
In the Northeast, that means agritourism and direct-to-consumer sales. Think pick-your-own apples or popping the kids on a hayride to go grab pumpkins.
Pick-your-own strawberries has been great for bringing in customers, Sandness said.
In addition to the frost fans, he鈥檚 considering other changes to adapt to the weather, like installing more irrigation. That鈥檚 because for farmers like Sandness, climate threats are always changing.
鈥淲e had a wet, wet, wet year. A dry, dry, dry year. And another wet, wet, wet one,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o what's 2024 gonna be?鈥