A farm worker hand prunes Merlot vines on an irrigated farm near Griffith, 490 km (305 miles) west of Sydney, August 22, 2007. Australian grape growers reckon they are the canary in the coalmine of global warming, as a long drought forces winemakers to rethink the styles of wine they can produce and the regions they can grow in.
The sun shines down on Merlot vines on an irrigated farm near Griffith, 490 km (305 miles) west of Sydney, August 22, 2007. Australian grape growers reckon they are the canary in the coalmine of global warming, as a long drought forces winemakers to rethink the styles of wine they can produce and the regions they can grow in.
A farm worker prunes Merlot vines on an irrigated farm near Griffith, 490km (305miles) west of Sydney, in this August 22, 2007 file photo. Australian grape growers reckon they are the canary in the coalmine of global warming, as a long drought forces winemakers to rethink the styles of wine they can produce and the regions they can grow in.
Farm workers prune Merlot vines on an irrigated farm near Griffith, 490 km (305 miles) west of Sydney, in this August 22, 2007 file photo. Australian grape growers reckon they are the canary in the coalmine of global warming, as a long drought forces winemakers to rethink the styles of wine they can produce and the regions they can grow in.
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