Dorian damage worse than first thought in Nova Scotia’s famed Annapolis Valley
HALIFAX — Closer inspections of the ripening apple crop in Nova Scotia’s fertile Annapolis Valley have revealed the damage caused by post-tropical storm Dorian was worse than first thought.
“We’ve lost a major part of our crop here, and some will be downgraded as well,” said Larry Lutz, an apple grower and president of the Nova Scotia Fruit Growers’ Association.
Last weekend, Dorian’s hurricane-force winds snapped thousands of trees and pulled tonnes of fruit to the ground across the valley. The 120-kilometre strip of land between two low-slung mountains is renowned for a warm microclimate that supports the province’s most productive farms and vineyards.
At the Lutz Family Farm in Rockland, up to 40 per cent of the gross value of this season’s apple crop has been lost, Lutz said.