Monday 3 July 2023

Weather 2023

As a farmer, there are so many things to consider when doing your work. None is more important than the weather since it drives everything you do. This year has been another example of how weather extremes through climate change, are making it harder to work the land. 

Normally, in a good year, we have a damp spring that eventually gets dryer and changes to weeks where you see 3 or 4 days of sun and a day or 2 of rain. That allows for water to get absorbed into the ground but also the gardens and pastures to get sun to grow pasture grass and produce. This has been the pattern for generations on the farm with a few odd exceptions over the last 200 years. 

This year is another year of extremes. Last month, for 4 weeks we worried about the dry conditions as it didn't rain for weeks. There were wildfires all over Nova Scotia and we actually started to plan an evacuation plan in case there was a fire here. The dry conditions stunted the hay growth and impacted the pasture and gardens and I was starting to feed hay to the cattle to take pressure off the pasture. Fast forward a month and we have had rain for nearly 4 weeks with only a few sunny days. The amount of rain has been nearly 2 months worth in 3-4 weeks which has left pastures saturated, seeds and bulbs rotting in the ground and a very wet pasture for the cattle. This is as damaging as dry conditions at this point. 

                                                (Soaked hay grass in one of our hay fields)


Typically we would be haying right now but at this point, there is no forecast that shows a stretch of dry weather for the next two weeks. This means our season will likely get pushed out longer for making hay, meaning the hay quality won't be as good as it is now and we may not get a second cut made. Christina has also had a difficult year with her dahlia's as she planted them when it was very dry but before the first rain so they would get a good start but the first week of rain after the dry conditions dropped 7 inches of rain which soaked the ground too much and rotted nearly 1/2 her tubbers. This has set her back 2 years and cost thousands of dollars in tubbers. 

As we watch these weather events play out over the province and across the country, it's no wonder food prices are increasing since it's harder to grow produce and raise animals in a changing climate. 

Farm Planning for 2024

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