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Evaluating Crop Damage After The Storm

 
A series of storms moving through Saskatchewan this week has left its share of damage, from broken trees to flooded roads and crops.
 
There have been reports of everything from heavy rain and wind, to hail, plow winds, funnel clouds and even tornadoes.
 
Shannon Friesen, a Crops Extension Specialist says farmers are out evaluating the crop damage.
 
"It all depends on what stage the crop was at and how much hail or other damage it had, on whether or not the plant can recover."
 
Friesen says certainly it doesn’t really matter where you are in the Province right now, it seems like everybody got something over the last couple of days. What’s most important to remember is that you need to give the crop time. 
 
“We do recommend that you wait a couple days and check some of those growing points, to see if things are green. In many cases, the blossoms will have been knocked right off. So for those, you know, it’s really hard to say until we give it some more time in order to see if it can recover.”
 
She says when it comes to things like excess moisture and flooding in some fields, that water will recede and you shouldn’t have any long-term issues with that. When it comes to hail damage there’s been reports of tennis ball to baseball size hail leaving some crops completely wiped out.
 
 
Source : Discoverestevan

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EP 65 Grazing Through Drought

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Welcome to the conclusion of the Getting Through Drought series, where we look at the best management practices cow-calf producers in Alberta can use to build up their resiliency against drought.

Our hope is that the series can help with the mental health issues the agriculture sector is grappling with right now. Farming and ranching are stressful businesses, but that’s brought to a whole new level when drought hits. By equipping cow-calf producers with information and words of advice from colleagues and peers in the sector on the best ways to get through a drought, things might not be as stressful in the next drought. Things might not look so bleak either.

In this final episode of the series, we are talking to Ralph Thrall of McIntyre Ranch who shares with us his experience managing grass and cows in a pretty dry part of the province.