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Spring drought has farmers irrigating, fire watchers on alert

For the first time in years, Rob Galey has had to water his corn and pumpkin crops immediately after seeding. 鈥淭he seeds will not germinate because the ground is so dry,鈥 says the Saanich farmer.
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Michell鈥檚 Farm worker Mauricio Sanchez picks zucchinis on Wednesday, June 9, 2021. DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST

For the first time in years, Rob Galey has had to water his corn and pumpkin crops immediately after seeding.

鈥淭he seeds will not germinate because the ground is so dry,鈥 says the Saanich farmer. 鈥淭his is very rare, but we just don鈥檛 have the moisture this year.鈥

Farmers all along the east coast of Vancouver Island have turned on irrigation systems, while wildfire watchers are concerned amid a record spring drought that鈥檚 spread across the southern portion of the province.

Environment sa国际传媒 said the period between March 1 and May 31 was 鈥渆xtraordinarily dry,鈥 with only a fraction of normal rainfall in several areas where key agricultural crops are produced and in forests where spring rains are needed to dampen fire dangers.

Nanaimo has recorded just 75 millimetres of rain over the three months, compared with an average of 231 mm鈥 for the fourth driest spring since records started in 1893.

The Victoria airport weather station has seen just 53 mm of rain since March 1, a third of the normal 154 mm, setting a new dry mark since records began in 1940. Gonzales station has had more rainfall 鈥 83 mm this spring 鈥 but still well below the usual 112 mm.

Campbell River is 50% below normal for rainfall and had its sixth driest spring on record, said Environment sa国际传媒 spokesman Doug Lundquist. The trend has extended across the province, with record dry spells in Abbotsford, Kelowna and Vernon, where spring rain is at a 115-year low.

The lack of rainfall during the crucial spring period and a forecast of above-normal temperatures in the summer make for a potentially dangerous wildfire season, said Lundquist.

鈥淚t worries me because the spring rain hasn鈥檛 materialized,鈥 he said in an interview. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge concern for fire weather.鈥

Coastal Fire Centre spokeswoman Dorthe Jakobsen said there have been 57 wildfires since April 1, more than double the total from last year and above the 10-year average of 30. All have been small blazes and believed to be human-caused, covering less than 70 hectares.

She said June precipitation is essential to keep the forest and its fuels moist and humidity up.

鈥淛une always makes or breaks the fire season for us 鈥 it鈥檚 a critical month,鈥 said Jakobsen. 鈥淚f we get lots of rain in June, it sets us up to get through July and August fairly well.鈥

The fire centre has not issued any campfire or open-fire bans as yet, but is watching areas closely, said Jakobsen.

鈥淚t can take just a few days of sun and heat to change that,鈥 she said.

The immediate forecast for the coast fire region is a low system building off the west coast of the Island that will bring scattered showers into next week.

Terry Michell, whose family grows berries and vegetables in a sprawling valley on the Saanich Peninsula, has been tapping into irrigation ponds and wells since late March.

He said cooler temperatures have slowed some crops, but strawberries, lettuce, zucchini, kale, beets, onions and leeks are being harvested by workers.

鈥淲e鈥檝e used a lot of water to get the crops going,鈥 Michell said. 鈥淪ome are behind a little because it鈥檚 been cool. The workers like it because it鈥檚 not so hot or wet.鈥

Galey said big investments over the years in drip irrigation and plastic crop coverings are paying off this year as the drought continues.

Drip irrigation systems deliver a constant supply of moisture to plants, while plastic coverings keep moisture from evaporating and weeds from spreading.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been able to reduce our water by 80 to 90%, so we don鈥檛 use a lot of it,鈥 said Galey, whose land is on municipal water supplies and spread over Saanich.

Strawberries are the main cash crop at the moment, with farmers selling the sweet red berries at farm gates and wholesaling to local grocery stores.

Galey has more than a half a million plants producing or ready to be planted, staggering the production from May through to October.

He said conditions are perfect for the berries. 鈥淪trawberries don鈥檛 like it too hot,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey like it 20 C.鈥

Big-acre farmers like Michell and Galey are also welcoming back temporary workers from Mexico. Galey will have 20 this year and Michell 16.

The workers are quarantined in Vancouver hotels for two weeks and given vaccines, with those costs picked up by the province. The farmers pay for chartered airfare, which has more than doubled compared to last year to between $1,000 and $1,200 per worker.

Galey said airfares have risen because the chartered planes are going back empty and farmers are picking up those costs.

Meanwhile, the Capital Regional District said the Sooke Lake reservoir 鈥 the region鈥檚 main source of water 鈥 was at 91.5% per cent of capacity. The Goldstream reservoir was at 87.6%.

鈥淭here are no concerns with water supply heading into summer season as the Sooke Lake Reservoir is at a typical seasonal level, and water restrictions are expected to remain at Stage 1 until the end of September,鈥 a CRD spokeswoman said Wednesday.

The CRD started its Stage 1 watering restrictions on May 1, allowing even addresses lawn watering Wednesdays and Saturdays between 4 and 10 a.m. and 7 to 10 p.m., and odd-numbered addresses lawn watering Thursday and Sundays during the same hours.

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