
Kent farmer's innovation produces bumper crop of cherries
A Kent farmer said he has seen his cherry harvest double in the past five years thanks to industry innovation. Tom Hulme, managing director of growers AC Hulme based near Canterbury, Kent, said this year's cherry season will last 10 weeks, which is double the length of the season five years ago.He explained the country's cherry industry has been transformed by the use of dwarf root stock, grafted on to new tree varieties.Mr Hulme said: "The British cherry industry is moving at pace again now and new varieties are being brought in that are not only better suited to the British climate to improve quality and taste, but also to help us extend the growing season."
The grower said his farm has introduced early season cherries such as sweet aryana and grace star, as well as late season varieties to extend the growing season. The farm has also been controlling air conditions post-harvest to extend the fruit's shelf life, as well as using polytunnels to control conditions. But, he says, they have been given a helping hand by a warm spring. Mr Hulme said: "The good news is that this year we have had pretty decent growing conditions and we are looking forward to a nice long season with the best quality fruit for several years."Mr Hulme is one of many farmers across the UK who have reported their largest predicted cherry yield for three years, according to supermarket Tesco. British growers are set to produce an estimated 8,000 tonnes of cherries – four times the harvest of 2018 and 14 times the yield of 559 tonnes in 2015.
Meeting summer demand
Tesco cherry buyer Olivia Amey credited the bumper crop to the sunny spring weather. The brand predicts they will be able to sell exclusively British cherries from early July.Ms Amey said: "The extra sunshine and daylight hours have played a major part in the quality of the fruit we've been sampling from around the country over the last few weeks and we know customers are going to be impressed."It's also meant that overall volume is up early in the season, meaning that we'll be able to meet the usual summer demand for cherries solely with British produce."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Premium Bonds prize checker: When is July's NS&I draw and how can I check if I've won?
Every month, savers have the chance to win big prizes as the Premium Bonds winning numbers are announced. There are now 24 million people taking part in the government-backed savings scheme, with more than £127bn banked. Premium bonds are an investment product from the National Savings and Investment (NS&I), which is owned by the government. Each month, millions of savers are entered into a prize draw to win cash prizes ranging from £25 to £1 million, with two millionaires made at every draw. Every £1 entered has a 22,000-to-one chance of winning. The minimum investment is £25, while the maximum is £50,000. These savings don't accrue interest as with regular bank accounts, but are put up against a random digital prize picker called 'Ernie' – the Electronic Random Number Indicator Equipment. The date of this month's draw is Wednesday 2 July. The results of this draw are available a day later and released by the NS&I here. What are the chances of winning? There are many premium bond winners every month, but the actual chance of winning remains fairly low. Most people will never win a prize, meaning their investment will stay the same. However, the scheme is also risk-free, meaning money won't be lost either. Analysis by money expert Martin Lewis found that the 'interest rate' on premium bonds accounts is 4 per cent when all winnings are considered – but notes most people won't see anything like this. Many savings accounts in the UK also offer a higher interest rate than this, which will be far more consistent. The distribution of prizes changes slightly every month. Here were the results in January 2025: £1 million x 2 £100,000 x 82 £50,000 x 163 £25,000 x 328 £10,000 x 818 £5,000 x 1,636 £1,000 x 17,163 £500 x 51,489 £100 x 1,987,844 £50 x 1,987,844 £25 x 1,803,871 How to check if you've won To check if you've won a prize on premium bonds, you can visit the NS&I checker on its website and enter your bond numbers. There is also an NS&I app which allows savers to check results on the go.


Telegraph
14 minutes ago
- Telegraph
House prices fall unexpectedly after Reeves's stamp duty tax raid
01 July 2025 7:49am 7:49AM Interest rate cuts will reignite house price growth, say economists Interest rate cuts will help house prices regain momentum next year, economists have said. Nationwide said the value of the average home fell for the third time in four months in June, while the annual rate of growth dropped to an 11-month low of 2.1pc. However, separate data from the Bank of England on Monday showed mortgage approvals increased by 2,400 to 63,000 in May. Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said: 'The first rise in the number of mortgage approvals in five months in May points to the annual growth rate of house prices rising back to around 3.5pc. 'That might not happen in time to meet our existing forecast that prices will rise by 3.5pc in the year to the fourth quarter of 2025. 'But our new forecast that Bank Rate will fall from 4.25pc now to 3pc next year (our previous forecast was for a fall to 3.5pc) suggests that housing activity and prices will regain more momentum next year.' 7:35AM Good morning Thanks for joining me. House prices dropped unexpectedly in June after Rachel Reeves refused to extend the stamp duty holiday. Here is what you need to know. 5 things to start your day Trump triggers dollar's worst start to year since 1973 | US president's tariff onslaught sent US assets plunging amid worries over the future of the world's largest economy 'No intention of coming back': The expats choosing proximity to Iran over a life in Britain | Conflict in the Middle East hangs over the calm in tax-free Dubai – but for many life goes on Families' disposable income slumps in blow to Labour | Prime Minister's pledge to raise living standards on shaky ground as inflation and tax rises hit households Ben Marlow: British manufacturing could disappear for good under Labour | A lethal cocktail of neglect, complacency and short-termism is devastating UK industry Adam Smith: Starmer has shredded Reeves's credibility – how long can she last? | Changing her fiscal rules would be a resigning matter for the Chancellor What happened overnight Asian shares are mostly higher after US stocks added to their records with the close of a second straight winning month. Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 1.2pc to 40,003.24 despite positive results of the central bank's quarterly Tankan survey of large manufacturers, which showed an better than expected improvement in business sentiment. The Shanghai Composite index added 0.2pc to 3,451.69 after China's official manufacturing purchasing managers index, or PMI, rose to a three-month high of 49.7 in June while the PMI for services and other non-manufacturing businesses also rose to a three-month high of 50.5. Hong Kong's stock market was closed on Tuesday. South Korea's Kospi Composite Index surged 1.5pc to 3,117.17 after the government reported that exports bounced back in June, helped by strong demand for semiconductors, ships and health products. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 edged up 0.1pc to 8,550.80. The PSEi in Manila, Philippines, rose 0.2pc. On Wall Street, US stocks rose modestly with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closing at record levels for a second session in a row, led by the tech sector. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.6pc, to 44,094.77, the S&P 500 rose 0.5pc, to 6,204.95, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.5pc, to 20,369.73. In the bond market, the yield on 10-year US Treasury notes fell to 4.228pc from 4.290pc late on Sunday.


BBC News
18 minutes ago
- BBC News
India-US trade: Is the 'big, beautiful' deal in trouble?
Is the "big, beautiful" India-US trade deal slipping out of reach?With just days to go before a 9 July deadline set by US President Donald Trump's administration, hopes of clinching an interim trade pact between Delhi and Washington remain alive but increasingly entangled in hard White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt hinting that the deal was imminent, and Indian Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman's upbeat assertion that Delhi would welcome "a big, good, beautiful" agreement - in response to Trump's claim that a trade deal with Delhi is coming and would "open up" the Indian market - negotiators remain locked in tough discussions. Key sticking points persist, particularly over agricultural access, auto components and tariffs on Indian trade officials have extended their stay in Washington for another round of talks, even as Delhi signals "very big red lines" on farm and dairy protections, and the US presses for wider market openings. The tone remains optimistic - but the window to strike a deal appears to be wants India to buy US corn - but here's why it probably won't"The next seven days could determine whether India and the US settle for a limited 'mini-deal' or walk away from the negotiating table - at least for now," says Ajay Srivastava, a former Indian trade official who runs Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI), a Delhi-based think uncertainty hinges on a few key flashpoints - none more contentious than agriculture."There are two real challenges to concluding an initial agreement. First on the list is US access to the Indian market for basic agriculture products. India will need to protect its basic agriculture sector for economic and political reasons," Richard Rossow, who tracks India's economy at Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the years, Washington has pushed for greater access to India's farm sector, seeing it as a major untapped market. But India has fiercely protected it, citing food security, livelihoods and interests of millions of small Rossow says the "second issue is India's non-tariff barriers. Issues like India's growing set of 'Quality Control Orders' (QCO) are significant obstacles to US market access and may prove tricky to meaningfully handle in a trade deal".The US has raised concerns over what it calls India's growing and burdensome import-quality rules. Over 700 QCOs - part of the "self-reliant India" push - aim to curb low-quality imports and promote domestic manufacturing. Suman Berry, a senior member of a government think tank Niti Aayog, has also called these rules a "malign intervention" that restrict imports and raise costs for domestic medium and small scale industries. The elephant in the room is farm exports. India-US farm trade remains modest at $8bn, with India exporting rice, shrimp and spices, and the US sending nuts, apples and lentils. But as trade talks progress, Washington is eyeing bigger farm exports - maize, soya bean, cotton and corn - to help narrow its $45bn trade deficit with fear tariff concessions could pressure India to weaken its minimum support prices (MSP) and public procurement - key protections that shield farmers from price crashes by guaranteeing fair prices and stable crop purchases."No tariff cuts are expected for dairy products or key food grains like rice and wheat, where farm livelihoods are at stake. These categories are politically and economically sensitive, affecting over 700 million people in India's rural economy," says Mr a recent Niti Aayog paper recommends tariff cuts on US farm imports - including rice, dairy, poultry, corn, apples, almonds and GM soya - under a proposed India-US trade pact. It's unclear, however, whether the proposal reflects official government thinking or remains a policy suggestion on paper."If the US were to say 'no deal' if India does not include access on basic agriculture, then clearly American expectations were not set correctly. Any democratically-elected government will have political limits to commercial policy choices," says Mr what could happen with the deal now?Experts like Mr Srivastava believe that the "more likely outcome is a limited trade pact" - styled after the US-UK mini trade deal announced on 8 the proposed deal, India may cut tariffs on a range of industrial goods - including automobiles, a long-standing US demand - and offer limited agricultural access via tariff cuts and quotas on select products like ethanol, almonds, walnuts, apples, raisins, avocados, olive oil, spirits and tariff cuts, the US is likely to push India for large-scale commercial buys - from oil and LNG to Boeing aircraft, helicopters and nuclear reactors. Washington may also seek FDI easing in multi-brand retail, benefiting firms like Amazon and Walmart, and relaxed rules on re-manufactured goods."This 'mini-deal', if concluded, would therefore focus on tariff reductions and strategic commitments, leaving broader FTA issues - including services trade, intellectual property (IP) rights and digital regulations - for a future negotiation," says Mr the start, the India-US trade talks appeared to be grounded in a clear and fair vision."The two leaders [Trump and Modi] laid out a simple concept in their first summit this year. The US would focus on manufactured goods that are capital-intensive, while India would focus on items that are labour-intensive," says Mr Rossow. But things appear to have changed talks fail, Trump is unlikely to reinstate the 26% tariffs on India, experts believe. While 57 countries faced these levies in April, only the UK has secured a deal so far. Targeting India specifically could seem unfair. "Still, with Trump, surprises can't be ruled out," says Mr Srivastava.