P.E.I. potato farmers still feeling summer drought into September - Action News
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PEI

P.E.I. potato farmers still feeling summer drought into September

Many potato fields across P.E.I. are not in the condition they are usually at this time of year due to the hot and dry conditions for much of July and August.

'The moratoriumis 18 years old and it's high time that we take a harderlook'

More rain could still help potato farmers who are dealing with a tough year after a hot and dry summer. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Many potato fields across P.E.I. are not in the condition they are usually at this time of year due to the hot and dry conditions for much of July and August.

"Right now, on a non-irrigated field, if you pull up the potatoes, the rowjust kind of falls between your hands," said Kevin Murray, a potato farmer in Bedeque with Murray Farms Ltd.

"With no moisture, it'sjust not beach sandbut pretty close."

The Canadian Drought Monitor hadmuch of central P.E.I. in extreme drought condition as of Aug. 31. While there has been more rain in September, in the first half of the month it is only about half of normal rainfall.

Kevin Murray, a potato farmer in Bedeque, says the crop is not where it should be at this time of year. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

The leafy topof the plant typically dies off slowly before harvest, sending afinal burst of nutrients to the growing potato below.

"Normally potato plants do start to die down in September because we're moving close to the primary harvest season, but these plants have been mostly dead now for a week or two," saidRyan Barrett,research and agronomy co-ordinator with the P.E.I. Potato Board.

"They've largely had a lack of moisture whichcaused them to, sort of, die prematurely.Acombination of the lack of moisture itself and then some of the diseases that can, kind of, be brought on by lack of moisture," Barrett saidwhile standing in a field damaged by the dry conditions.

Ryan Barrett, researcher and agronomy co-ordinator with the P.E.I. Potato board, digs up a test area to see what a potato plant was able to produce in the dry summer conditions. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

The lack of moisture can leave the potato stunted or oddlyshaped.

Barrett said the rainfall data he looks at shows some areas in central P.E.I. havebeen hit the hardest.

The effect of dry weather conditions will vary based on what varietyof potatowas planted, when and the site itself, he said.

Farmers have been using new practices and differentcrop varieties, Barrett said,to help improve the crop's ability to survive in drier conditions.

"We are still going to have a decline in yields this year but maybe not at the level that we've seen in some other droughts," Barrett said.

"I think that's really a credit to the growers and the ingenuity that they show and the new practices that they're employing,especially when it comes to things like improving crop rotation and improving tillage practices."

Barrett credits evolving agricultural practices used by farmers for helping keep yields up despite the hot and dry summer weather. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Irrigation moratorium

Some farmers feel that the best way to support the cropwould be to have a steady supply of water through irrigation, if the rain is not consistent.

Two presentations on the provinces Water Actwill be made to P.E.I.'s Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability committee on Thursday.

Robert Godfrey, executive director with the P.E.I. Federation of Agriculture, will be involved in one of the presentations.

"No one has been able to to explain to the farming community why it is that our industry alone is unable to get access to resources for supplemental irrigation when required across P.E.I.," Godfrey said.

"And the Water Act is there with very adequate controls now. So, you know, the moratoriumis 18 years old and it's high time that we take a harderlook at it, and we take a harder look at that through an actual scientific research project"

Some varieties of potatoes were able to survive the heat, but will still need rain soon to help them grow to their full potential. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

'We dig what's there'

Back in Bedeque, Murraysaid he has been able to keep two thirds of his fields irrigated from a local pond. He said it makes a difference, but at this pointthe dry conditions have left much of the potato plantsin the otherfield to die off early.

He is still a few weeks from harvest and hopes a bit of rain will fall to help.

"We dig what's there. You have to. You can't leave them in the ground," said Murray."You just get everything you put in. You're not going to get it all back outbut what's thereis there. We can't do much about it."

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