Ripe for the picking: how people are growing fruit that's not so common in Sask. - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Ripe for the picking: how people are growing fruit that's not so common in Sask.

Not everyone is growing peaches in Saskatchewan, but some have started to try. With a continually warming planet, it's possible more varieties of fruit could be grown here, but it could come at a cost.

Climate change could affect what we grow, and not always in positive ways

Places like Over the Hill Orchards and Winery are among the few locations in the province where you can find grapes.
Wine grapes grow on a vine inside a greenhouse at Over the Hill Orchards and Winery near Lumsden. It's just one place in the province where you can find the fruit growing. (Adam Bent/CBC)

Elaine McCaig has a full garden at her home in Hudson Bay about 330 kilometres northeast of Saskatoon. But it doesn't just contain the traditional prairie fare of vegetables and herbs.

She'sgrowing strawberries, elderberries and even a dozen cantaloupe, which are now in her kitchen ripe and ready to eat.

"(People's) first reaction is 'You can't grow that there,'" said McCaig. "And I say, 'Well, it's growing in my garden so obviously we can.'"

Cantaloupe like this grew easily this year in Elaine McCaig's garden in Hudson Bay.
Elaine McCaig was able to grow 12 cantaloupes in her garden in Hudson Bay this year. (Submitted by Elaine McCaig)

McCaig'sbotanical boundary pushing began when she and her husband moved to Hudson Bay from British Columbia in 2014. She noticed their new property had an over nine-metre-talloak tree standing in the yard.

"I thought, if we can grow an oak tree up here, what else can we grow?" she said."Why not push the limits?

Now, she's making jams and syrups with her unique bounty.

Nearly 400 kilometres southwest of McCaig, nearLumsden, Dean Kreutzerhas also been experimenting with different kinds of fruit not commonly found in Saskatchewan for 23 years.

Kreutzerwho owns Over the Hill Orchards and Winery affectionately refers to his operation as a laboratory.

"You test things and you fail and you succeed," he said. "It's just learning how certain plants react to the Saskatchewan climate."

Dean Kreutzer, owner of Over the Hill Orchards and Winery near Lumsden, says he treats his business like a laboratory, and hasn't been afraid to stumble when experimenting.
Dean Kreutzer, owner of Over the Hill Orchards and Winery near Lumsden, says curiosity and a demand for local food drove him to start his business. (Ethan Williams/CBC)

He grows everything from wine grapes tofigs and even peaches and nectarines. He says curiosity and a want for fresh, local foodfuelled him to try growing it in Saskatchewan.

"Part of the process istrying to see if we can do this economically," said Kreutzer.

"Instead of buying peaches from B.C. or whatever, you'd be buying them from Saskatchewan.Can we do it?Can the quality be as good and can the cost be competitive?"

Sask. has long history with fruit

Growing fruit especially crops not typically found here isn't anything new in Saskatchewan.

According to the provincial government, apples were first bred here in the 1920s. Sour dwarf cherriesa variety of cherry that can withstandthe province's bitterly cold winter temperatures were first introduced in the 1940s.

Even a variety of plum was first bred by a Doukhobor farmer near Canorain the 1970s.

The industry is also quite robust. An estimated 250 commercial fruit producers farm about900 hectares of land in the province, according to the provincial government.

Those producersbring in around 2,000 pounds of fruit per year, raking in between eight and nine million dollars. That adds about $20 million a year into the provincial economy.

Climate change could affect fruit growth

Peaches and grapes may soon become a more normal crop on the Prairiesif Earth's climate continues to warm.

According to data from Natural Resources Canada, warmer plant hardiness zones numbered and lettered zones that determine what can be planted where have shifted northward over the years.

The plant hardiness zone map from 1981-2010 shows a large swath of extreme southern Saskatchewan moved from a level 3a or 3b ratingto level 5a, when compared with the 1961-1990 map.

Higher zone numbers among other factors indicate warmer minimum temperatures.

Warmer plant hardiness zones have moved into Saskatchewan, according to the latest plant hardiness map. An updated map is expected next year.
A comparison of plant hardiness zone maps shows warmer zones have crept into Saskatchewan in the most recent update. A new update is expected sometime next year. (Natural Resources Canada)

A 2014 study in the journal BioSciencelooked atplant hardiness zone changes in relation to climate change.

"Overall, these shifts point to a coherent climate change signal across the seven climate variables that are integrated into the hardiness zone index values," the report notes.

John Pedlar, a research scientist with the Forestry Service of Canada, saidthe zone changes were most dramatic in western Canada.

"In Regina 50 years ago, the hardiness zone rating was a 2a, whereas when we updated our maps about 10 years ago, that rating had changed to a 3b," he said.

The extra warmth could mean more diverse fruit crops, but it could bring trouble with it, too.

Warmer weather could disrupt plants' natural dormancy periods, whenthey rest during the winter months. That could affect fruit production the next growing year.

It could also bring more diseases and pests, according to Bob Bors, an assistant professor of plant sciences at the University of Saskatchewanwho also runs theschool's fruit program.

Bob Bors with the University of Saskatchewan Fruit Program says pests and diseases are likely to increase as much as fruit production if our planet continues to warm due to climate change.
University of Saskatchewan Fruit Program head Bob Bors says climate change may bring more diverse fruit crops, but it could also bring diseases and more pests. (Travis Reddaway/CBC)

"Our winters kill a lot of the insects that want to live here, or get them off to a slow start," said Bors.

One example, he noted, is the spotted wing drosophilaafly-like insect that infestsand ruinsfruit plants in their ripening stage.

Bors said it's only a minor problem in the province now, "but it could become a major pest if it gets too warm."

Elaine McCaig said she's heard from people who have lived in the Hudson Bay area for a long time that they can grow things now that they weren't able to years ago.

She says she'llcontinueto pushthe limits on what she can grow in her own garden. Next up: honeydew melon.

"You might get something, you might not. But if you do, it's like 'Yes!We can do this.'"