| 29/06/07
 Tennis fans can still enjoy British strawberries as they watch
              Wimbledon because the crop has been protected from the unusually
            heavy rain by polytunnels. Since they were introduced 14 years ago, polytunnels have enabled
              British soft fruit growers to produce increasingly successful crops,
              not least because they prevent rain damage to growing fruit. In
              an average year, without the use of polytunnels some 40 per cent
            of the crop would be damaged by rainfall. Richard Hirst, NFU horticulture board chairman, said: “As
              well as extending the growing season from May until October, polytunnels
              also play a major role in saving ripening fruit from rain damage.
              Their use means the current bad weather will not have caused anywhere
              near as many problems as it could have done. “The British soft fruit industry is worth £185 million
              every year and polytunnels have been a key element in its development
              because of the improved conditions for growing they offer. British
              growers are now successfully competing with foreign imports from
              Spain and Egypt and increasing the growing season has had a major
              impact on the food miles that used to be attached to strawberries
              imported before June and after July.” This year particularly British growers will have found their polytunnels
              invaluable in protecting their crop and ensuring that British consumers
              are able to continue to enjoy the quality, low food miles, British
              soft fruit they have come to expect. 
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