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Cool spring has Prairie farmers praying for a change in the weather



Published on May 30, 2009
Published on July 10, 2009
The Canadian Press ~ The News  RSS Feed
Topics :
Alberta and Saskatchewan , Keystone Agricultural Producers , Canadian Wheat Board , Manitoba , Saskatoon , Southern Manitoba

Saskatoon -

A cool spring across the Prairies has slowed the progress of many farmers who are praying that June will bring them a much needed change in the weather.

In Alberta and Saskatchewan, farmers have managed to put most of their crops in the ground. But some land is so dry, seeds are just laying in dust and farmers fear they may not germinate.

However, Manitoba producers are dealing with too much moisture.

"They're looking for rain, they can have some of ours," says Robert McLean, a farmer near Manitou in southern Manitoba. "It's been such a cool, damp spring, it's never really dried out."

McLean says he only has 40 per cent of his canola and wheat crops seeded. Normally he'd be finished by this time of year, but most of his fields aren't dry enough. An extremely wet fall combined with recent dumps of rain have saturated his fields.

And there's been no warm sunshine to dry things out. In fact, it's been so wet that McLean has been forced to tow his tractor out of the mud a few times. Although he's stressed, others are even worse off.

"There's some farmers that haven't put a seed in the ground yet."

Some of the central and eastern areas of Manitoba near the Red River that flooded earlier this spring are still under water.

"I'm not sure some of those guys are going to get a crop in there this year. There's still water running out of the fields there," says Ian Wishart, president of Keystone Agricultural Producers in Winnipeg. "It is really wet there. They need a lot of good weather."

Bruce Burnett, director of weather and crop surveillance for the Canadian Wheat Board in Winnipeg, says the beginning of June is considered late to be planting crops such as wheat, canola and corn.

Farmers may have to change their plans and plant flax, oats and barley or soy beans instead.

"In agriculture, we all seem to be optimists about these things," Burnett says. "So, hopefully we get a window here so that most of this land can get planted."

Further west in Saskatchewan and Alberta, cold weather and some strange mid-May snow in northern areas delayed seeding. But 80 to 90 per cent of crops are in now.

Dry conditions are causing concern in eastern Alberta and western Saskatchewan.

"There's a need in the next week to two weeks to get a rain out in the western side of the Prairies," he said. "Because, unlike Manitoba, they've been quite dry now for a considerable period of time."

Comments

  • Username
    Jess
    - September 18, 2009 at 14:57:04

    The prices the farmers have to pay for the machines they have to use and for the parts to fix them never come down. -- in fact they just go up, reason being is the material they use to make combines, tractors, seeders, sprayers need to be good sturdy, better than ur nice little car to drive around..

    Farmers work a lot hard then most people around here, and as far as i care, they have rights to complain.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Clint
    - September 18, 2009 at 14:11:31

    (Yawn) Same old, same old. Too wet, not wet enough. Too cold, too hot. Prices high, prices down. The results are always the same... the outstretched palm looking for a handout. Often, they won't even wait till the seed is in the ground before the whining starts.

    God help them if we didn't live in a welfare state and they were left to their own in a free-market society.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Jeff
    - September 18, 2009 at 13:54:36

    I'm sure you'll be singing a different tune if you have a heart attack or stroke and your health care is covered by our welfare state.

    And let's all give thanks to the free market!When Bush and company in the US deregulated banks they ran amok and caused the huge financial mess which the world is in now. Thankfully due to the crazy socialists in Canada who decided that banks should be controlled so they do unscrupulous things like in the States, our banks survived. Canada is a great country because businesses can make a decent (not obscene) profit but not at the expense of our safety and health. And before you blast me, I am a business owner.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    lj
    - September 18, 2009 at 13:32:02

    Clint there are many ways out of this country - you should take one. The farmers should be the highest paid in the world considering they produce the food we all eat. You tell me when the last time was that any wage earner took a cut in pay - that's the reality when commodity prices drop for a farmer. The prices the farmers have to pay for the machines they have to use and for the parts to fix them never come down.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    MJChick
    - September 18, 2009 at 13:07:56

    Farmer have every right to complain. They have the job that puts food on your table Clint and they make very little money doing it. If you don't like hearing about farming, why did you even bother to open this story up and read it? Put your money where your mouth is and take a seeder out to the field and get working, or are you suckin up on the system?

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Jimmy
    - September 18, 2009 at 12:44:27

    Before you all go blasting Clint, think for a minute. Maybe he doesn't need the farmers. Maybe he grows all his own produce, milks his own cow or goat, butchers himself a steer in the fall, and grinds his own wheat for flour for his bread. If not, then may he starve or change his tune.

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