‘Too little, too late,’ agronomist says of recent rainfall
Recent rainfall will not benefit drought-stricken farmers, says a crop expert from the province’s Ministry of Agriculture.
“It’s far too little and far too late to change anything right now. Any good rain that we get on any pastureland or some hay land, that’ll help those grasslands to recover a little bit. But for annual crops, it’s kind of set in stone,” said Matthew Struthers, a crop extension specialist.
Struthers said the rain arrived about a month late, not enough time for cereals, pulses and oilseeds planted in the spring and set to be harvested in the fall. Had the moisture came in early July, it would have been “a much different season.”
Crops seeded late, past early May and into June, are further behind in development.