Farms.com Home   News

‘Desperately dry:’ Anticipated snowfall promising for Sask. producers

For the first time in a long time, there’s snow in the forecast for most of the province.

For farmers and ranchers, the snow that’s expected to begin late this week is promising, as many depend on the moisture it brings to help get their crops going and fill dugouts once the spring hits.

Garner Deobald is the president of the Saskatchewan Stock Growers Association. He suggested the dry winter has impacted most producers throughout the province.

“The entire prairies is in varying degrees of drought,” he explained. “When you look at the Environment Canada precipitation accumulated since September, it is in some areas well below 50 per cent from where we normally are this time of year. There’s no subsoil (moisture) either, so in some areas, we’re desperately dry.”

While the little bit of snow that is projected is welcome news, Deobald said producers will need a lot more to get things in good shape for the upcoming season.

“Just to recharge ground water and replenish or refresh dugouts and dams, we’ll need a considerable amount of snow before spring melt. We’re talking probably feet of snow to amount to enough to get us through these dry conditions that we’re experiencing right now,” he said.

Deobald said the province has faced dry winters before, but some areas were already dealing with drought last season.

“We have had some years where Christmas has been brown, but for some regions, this has just been such an extended drought where they’re running into year six or seven of below-average rainfall. It is problematic,” he stated.

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Adapting to ESA: Bulletins Live! Two

Video: Adapting to ESA: Bulletins Live! Two


In part 2 of CropLife America’s “Adapting to ESA” instructional video series, learn how to determine location-specific restrictions using Bulletins Live! Two (BLT). Dr. Stanley Culpepper, a leading weed science specialist with the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension, provides a walkthrough of the tool.

Follow along with BLT, linked here: https://www.epa.gov/endangered-specie...

The video series is part of a new set of educational tools released by CropLife America (CLA), in partnership with the Agricultural Retailers Association (ARA) and the Council of Producers and Distributors of Agrotechnology (CPDA), to help farmers, agricultural retailers, and pesticide applicators better understand the Endangered Species Act (ESA).