Heatwave brings a berry challenging time for fruit farmerspublished at 17:30 BST
Dan Johnson
West of England correspondent

Bal Padda runs Vicarage Nurseries, a strawberry farm in Worcestershire that delivers fruit to Wimbledon. The farm is now however finding it harder as the berries ripen faster.
"They're ripening too quick, we can't get round them fast enough. It's very hot but we have to struggle and get on with it because if we leave it it will just get more ripe and won't be edible," he tells the BBC.
He says the biggest issue he's facing is not just the warm temperatures during the day, but in the evening too.
To get the deliveries and picking done, the team are coming in as early as 05:00 to meet their targets. He says they taking more breaks than usual due to the heat.
"There comes a point where it's too hot to work, which happened last year, meaning they pushed their work out earlier to get the work done," he explains.
Padda says although the weather can be great for families, working on a farm means they need "consistent seasons not the peaks and troughs" which can make it difficult to sell their fruit.






















