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Unharvested Crops, Wet Spring Causing Headaches For Farmers

 
When Humphrey Banack looks out the window on his farm, he can't see some of the fields he depends on to put food on the table and pay his bills.
 
Water from rain and melting snow is soaking grain and oilseed crops that the farmer near Round Hill, Alta., couldn't harvest last fall due to bad weather.
 
And fields he did manage to harvest are too sodden to walk on, let alone seed, due to a cold and wet spring.
 
"I haven't seen this much water lying around in all of the years I have farmed," Banack said. "We are looking at another two to three weeks before we can plant any crops or deal with the old crops."
 
Removing and disposing of last year's unharvested grains will be a challenge across much of the Prairies for many farmers who are eager to start spring seeding.
 
Alberta's Agriculture Financial Services Corp. says there are about 400,000 hectares of insured unharvested crops left over from last fall. A similar amount of uninsured crops remain in fields.
 
Farmers want officials to move quickly to assess and process crop insurance claims.
 
Any delay in seeding will push the growing season back, which could put new crops in jeopardy of frost damage this fall.
 
Some of the old crop may be salvageable. But for the portion that has to be written off, farmers hope governments will be flexible on how it can be disposed of.
 
Banack said some can be chopped up with harvesters, but burning it makes the most sense. Fields are too muddy to plow the material back into the ground.
 
"I know we don't need a big prairie fire running from Edmonton to Regina, but we are going to have to burn some of this crop. It has no value and it is going to be the best way to manage it."
 
Source : CBC

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