Ottawa Valley farmers grappling with rainy growing season - Action News
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Ottawa Valley farmers grappling with rainy growing season

Local farmers are left grappling with the consequences of a rainy summer, as the downpours disrupt their operations and threaten their crops.

Heavy rainfall making harvesting crops unpredictable for local farmers

A sign out front of a farm before a well-maintained lawn with trees in the background.
The excessive amount of rain that's fallen this summer in the Ottawa Valley is 'really, really bad,' says Michel Villeneuve, the owner of this fruit farm in Clarence Rockland. (Joseph Tunney/CBC)

Ottawa Valley farmers are grappling with the consequences of a rainy summeras the season's downpours disrupt their operations and threaten their crops.

Rainfall totals measured at the Ottawa airport soaredto around 405 millimetres since June far exceeding the usual 264 millimetres, according toEnvironment and Climate Change Canada.

Michel Villeneuve, the owner of a fruit farm in Clarence Rockland, said all this rain has been "really, really bad."

"We won't have a fall harvest at all, zero. Everything has been affected by the rain," he said.

A man wears a shirt with the name of his farm on it as he stands near a field.
Villeneuve growspears, apples, blueberries, raspberries and cherries. (Joseph Tunney/CBC)

Villeneuve growspears, apples, blueberries, raspberries, and cherries, butthe prolonged periods of high humidity have prevented the fruit andplants from being able to properly dry out.

For the first time, Villeneuve said he sawsome blueberries rot on the plant themselves.

The farm's apples have also been severely affected, with very few remaining on the trees afterfalling about amonth early. Somehave developed a lot of brown spots due to a fungal disease called scab, further damaging the quality of the fruit.

"There's nothing we could do with rain. When it's dry, we can water. That's simple. We can irrigate. But when it's raining excessively, we don't have access to the tap.We can't close it," Villeneuvesaid.

To help protect against the rain,Villeneuve'sfarm has turned to more resistant plant varieties, he said.

Two red apples are held in someone's hands.
Villeneuve says some apples have developed brown spots due to a fungal disease called scab, further damaging the quality of the fruit. (Joseph Tunney/CBC)

'It's a guessing game at this point'

Andrea McCoy-Naperstkow, theOntario Federation of Agriculture regional director forArnprior, Lanark,Renfrewand Ottawa, saidheavy rainfall leaves "little ponds" on crops, raises water levels in nearby rivers and has led to some flooding in areas like the Carp River.

McCoy-Naperstkowoperatesa crop and beef farm with her husband in Lanark County and said unpredictable weather patterns havemade it increasingly difficult for farmers to plan their harvests.

"It's a guessing game at this point," she said."The harvest could be between the next month or so to December."

Farmers tell us a wet summer, coupled with this weekend's soggy forecast, can ruin a year's worth of work. Meteorologist Gerald Cheng explains it's no surprise given the fact it's been the one of the wettest summers on record.

Some farmers are adapting to the changing climate bygrowing plants using water-based nutrient solutions instead of soil.

"Farming is not for the faint of heart," McCoy-Naperstkow said. "But if we didn't love it, we wouldn't do it."

with files from Jodie Applewaithe