Greenhouse damage at Lester's Farm won't delay spring opening - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:50 PM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Greenhouse damage at Lester's Farm won't delay spring opening

A St. John's farm is looking on the bright side after last weekend's wind storm damaged several structures on the property.

Chris Lester says while plastic covering blew away on 5 greenhouses, no plants were lost

Lester's Farm co-owner Chris Lester stands in front of one of the farm's greenhouses that were damaged last weekend. (CBC)

A St. John's farm is looking onthe bright side after last weekend's wind storm damaged several structures on the property.

Five greenhouses sustained damaged at Lester's Farm on Brookfield Road on Saturday, when hurricane-force gusts tore through the region.

Five of the 17 greenhouses at Lester's Farm were damaged by Saturday's wind storm, which blew the plastic and polycarbonate coverings off the structures, like the one seen here. (CBC)

Co-owner Chris Lester saidthat while the damage is still a setback,damage to only five of their 17 greenhouses is manageable and could have been much more devastating. He said they will still open on time later this spring.

"We're quite fortunate we didn't have any crops in there," hetold CBC from inside one of the damaged greenhouses.

"Our structures are still good.It's just the plastic and the polycarbonate coatings missing they're somewhere very far east of here, we're not too sure."

Chris Lester said having the wind blow the plastic covering off the greenhouses actually had one benefit; they no longer have to move these perennials outside in the sun. (CBC)

Lester said hadthe same storm happened two months in the future when they are in the middle of growing flowers inside the greenhousesthe losses would have been much more substantial. Currently, the structures only have benches and other equipment inside.

The brighter side

The farm also narrowly avoided disaster with the vegetables they'regrowing using hydroponics. As the system requires electricity to get the water flowing, even a short period without power could ruin all the plants.

"We were lucky enough we had our generators going to keep the water pumping," Lester said. "There are very little roots here, and if the water had havestopped pumping for even an hour, we would have lost everything in this greenhouse."

The owners of the farm are thankful they had a backup generator to keep the hydroponic systems running. Otherwise, these vegetables would likely have perished due to lack of water. (CBC)

Lester said there are positives that came out of the damage, including the fact that theyno longer have to move perennials outside from one of the affected greenhouses.

"I guess on the brighter side, we don't have to do that now anymore because there's noplastic on this greenhouse," he said.

"Also, we've always got people looking for used greenhouse plastic to cover their greenhouses, that's not going to problem this year we've got an abundance of it."

With files from Bruce Tilley