A string of extreme weather events continues to wreak havoc in Spain, this time in the northwestern regions of Bierzo and Valdeorras.
A storm on 25 June hit Valtuille de Abajo and the surrounding areas, pummeling between 500-600 hectares of Bierzo’s most prized vineyards with hailstones the size of golf balls, crushing grapes, tearing leaves off vines and even damaging canes and permanent wood.
This is the second hailstorm in as many weeks. On 18 June a storm passed over nearby Cacabelos, pelting about 250 hectares of vineyards around the town with ice. The event also affected the nearby Ourense province, wiping out vineyards across DO Valdeorras.
With only two months left until harvest, growers are left with serious doubts about salvaging what looked to be an excellent vintage. And, extensive damage to vines may jeopardise next year’s harvest as well.
In Bierzo, most of the damage was centred in Valtuille de Abajo and Valtuille de Arriba. The affected area is home to about half of the DO’s premier vineyards, including the parajes of Villegas, Poulosa, Valdoneje, Telleria, Cabanelas, and Las Gundiñas.
‘In Valtuille it’s brutal,’ said Nacho León of Demencia Wine. ‘Almost the whole town was affected, about 90%, if not 100%,’ he said.
León added that damage to vine shoots means the storm will affect both the 2024 and 2025 vintages, calling the situation ‘a disaster’.
Nearby villages