In the
past six weeks, Cheryl Berry's farm has seen only a quarter inch of rain.
"That's
not a lot," said the owner of Fleetwood Farms, a small family-run
operation in Hurley, Ontario.
The
Berry's farm is just one in Ontario that could use some relief — more rain and
also some funds to conpensate for low yields.
Ontario's
minister of agriculture asked Monday for possible federal support to help
farmers dealing with drought.
A
spokesperson for minister Ted McMeekin confirmed that a letter was sent to the
federal ministry of agriculture asking for an AgriRecovery review, an
assessment of the current agricultural conditions.
“It's in
response to the dry conditions,” said ministry spokesperson Mark Cripps.
The
federal government has 45 days to complete the assessment. McMeekin will then
meet with Gerry Ritz, federal minister of agriculture, to come up with an ad
hoc program to assist farmers.
“AgriRecovery
is meant to fill the gaps,” said Cripps. “It's a last resort option for a
situation like this.”
What an ad
hoc program might look like depends on what the assessment finds. Cripps said
that AgriRecovery was put in place after a series of tornadoes that destroyed
apple orchards in Grey-Bruce county. Farmers were given extra funds to help
re-plant what they lost, he said.
Berry said
any funds would help and would subsidize what she lost this year. She doesn't
have insurance for her 50-acre farm because it is too expensive. Her farm is
too small to qualify for the ministry's insurance program.
"[The
ministry] tends to look after the bigger farms," Berry said. "Not the
small guys."
In the
Hamilton area, Cripps said there is still some optimism growers could yield
average crop sizes.
“Rain came
[last week] at a critical time for the soybean crop,” said Cripps. “Corn still
has a chance the yields would be average.”
Berry said
her corn crop yield is about average, but she is still feeling the loss of her
apple crop earlier this year. A flash-freeze in the spring caused about 90 per
cent of the apples to spoil. At the Hamilton Farmer's Market on Tuesday, she
only had one small basket of apples to sell on her table.
Next door
at the market, Gord Williams of the Williams Brothers Farm in Waterdown said
his corn is fine, too. It's his tomatoes that are suffering.
"If
we get some rain later, the rest will be ok," Williams said.
Drought
conditions vary regionally, Cripps said, largely based on the soil. In
Hamilton, he said, the soil is clay based and doesn't retain moisture well.
But what
farmers are experiencing here is not close to the levels of stress farmers in
Eastern Ontario are seeing.
Cripps
said the provincial ministry has also asked that the federal government
accelerate its assessment of prescribed drought areas, which could help Eastern
Ontario farmers.
Drought
areas are usually declared in September or October, but Cripps said some areas
in Eastern Ontario are so bad, they need assistance now.
If a
drought area is declared, livestock farmers won't be penalized financially if
they choose to reduce their herd because they can't grow enough crop to feed
it.
McMeekin
is in the Renfrew, Ontario area today visiting farms affected by drought.
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