Moisture conditions expected to improve on the prairies after seeding
MELFORT, Sask. – Timing is everything when it comes to farming.
There was a great deal of stress after last year’s drought on the prairies but an agricultural meteorologist said the spring will start off relatively dry but there are signs of improvements from June on.
Drew Lerner with World Weather Inc. said patience will be the key for growers in areas of western Canada that have poor soil moisture and little to no winter snow cover.
Lerner uses the 18-year upper air wind flow cycle and surface water temperatures in the Pacific Ocean in his long-term weather projections.