Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.08.2010, Blaðsíða 8

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.08.2010, Blaðsíða 8
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca 8 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1 August 2010 Joan Eyolfson Cadham This could be the year when, in Saskatchewan, it’s too wet for ducks. Certainly, in the 38 Rural Mu- nicipalities and 20 small towns and villages where local gov- ernments have declared disas- ter because of heavy rain, resi- dents have noticed that there aren’t many baby ducks on the sloughs and roadside marshes. There’s not much healthy- looking grain growing in the fields alongside those roads, either, even though Crop Insur- ance extended the final date for insured seeding to June 20. By then, R.M.s in the north east and east central parts of the province had declared an agri- cultural disaster. About nine million Sas- katchewan farm acres were not planted this spring. Add another four million acres that were seeded then flooded out, and that’s 18 percent of Cana- da’s farmland that will not pro- duce a crop this year. In large parts of the Vatnabyggð area, only 29 percent of seeding was completed and some farmers did not ever manage to get onto the land. Danny Thorsteinson of Foam Lake has planted 51 crops. There has never been a time, until this year, when he has not been able to put one in. “I got a third in. One third is washed out. One third of the bal- ance is turning yellow from too much moisture and not enough nutrients. The rain is leaching away everything you gained over the years. It’s all going down the creek,” he said. “Our income is the crop. Not seeding is like your employer telling you that you are not getting any cheques this year,” he said. But there’s an add- ed problem for farmers. It’s more than just not getting that cheque. “We still have to con- trol the weeds on the unseeded acres. We know that land has to be maintained and ready for next year.” By early June, when Sas- katchewan’s agriculture minis- ter was invited to fly over the fields in the Vatnabyggð area, he discovered the stark truth. “There were a couple of guys out there actually trying to do something out in the field and all you could see was ruts be- hind the tractor. It just high- lighted the effect of what all this water is doing. I think probably the biggest concern is it’s not letting up,” the minister said. He might have been carry- ing a crystal ball. Not only did the weather not get any bet- ter, it got worse. In order for a farmer to successfully plant a crop, the soil needs an adequate level of moisture down where the roots are going to grow, but those roots also need oxygen and too much water suffocates them. The farmer also needs the fields dry enough that he can safely run very large, very expensive equip- ment. Following a cold wet April, the skies opened in May. By June, the average day’s weather forecast brought storm warnings for potential severe thunderstorms with high winds and damag- ing hail with periodic threats of tornadoes. At best, the crop that is out there is in fair condition, said Foam Lake R.M. Reeve Chris Gislason. “There’s way too much moisture. There are a lot or acres where the crop has died out. It looks sick.” By July 15, Gislason’s rain gauge had registered 20 inches of rain. The area would nor- mally have eight inches by mid July. Average annual rainfall is 12 or 13 inches. “I can’t get out with the tractor and cultivate,” he said. South of Foam Lake, at the end of June, several farmers were hit with a storm that dumped five inches of rain and six inches of hail in 45 minutes. “I was wading in wettoo devilfor the This field is not going to yield a crop this year. If there was seed in the ground it has been drowned. “Our income is the crop. Not seeding is like your employer telling you that you are not getting any cheques this year...” – Danny Thorsteinson Discover the world at Koma Heim Trading - You’ll find Asian cabinets, country pine hutches, handcrafted bags, masks, baskets and pigs with wings. Sometimes surprising ... always inspiring. we’ve Moved! 77 First Avenue Gimli, MB New! Antique Chinese cabinets 642-8725 ARBORG PHARMACY Store hours: Monday - Saturday 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Friday 9 a.m. - 8 p.m. Sunday 12 noon - 4 p.m. Pharmacists: V. T. Eyolfson and B. Whitby Box 640, Arborg, MB R0C 0A0 ShAred wiSdom • ShAred Commitment • ShAred vAlueS Ph: 376-2212 • Fax: 376-2999 Free Prescription Delivery PHoto: MArLYIN WuNder

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