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Pumpkin patches across Canada spooked by the howling of climate change

Heavy rains following droughts have created challenges for pumpkin growers across country
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Weather vagaries this year caused by climate change have turned the Halloween pumpkin harvest spooky. Pumpkins are displayed outside of a grocery store in Mount Prospect, Ill., Friday, Sept. 15, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Nam Y. Huh

Extreme weather caused by climate change 91裸聊视频 droughts followed by heavy rains 91裸聊视频 wreaked havoc with the pumpkin harvest across Canada this year.

Nova Scotia pumpkin farmer Danny Dill said the spring planting season was extremely dry. A spell of hot weather and then nearly two weeks of historic wildfires in late May and early June left behind more than 235 square kilometres of scorched ground.

91裸聊视频淚t was just like a dust bowl there,91裸聊视频 said Dill, owner of Howard Dill Enterprises, in Windsor, N.S.

But starting in June heavy rains poured in, which made his farm resemble a waterbed and kept the bees away. When the pumpkin flowers bloomed across his patch, he said, there were fewer bees than usual to pollinate them.

91裸聊视频淚t91裸聊视频檚 been a spooky, really spooky season for a lot of us.91裸聊视频

This year91裸聊视频檚 pumpkin harvest in Canada and the United States is a stark reminder of the fact farmers are at the mercy of the weather gods. Climate change led to parts of the continent baking in severe heat this summer and other areas receiving heavy rain. Both extremes were bad for crops.

Some growers in states such as Texas, New Mexico and Colorado lost 20 per cent or more of their predicted yields, while others left their land bare.

Dill said the growing season on his nearly four hectares of land was the worst he91裸聊视频檚 had in 40 years of farming.

91裸聊视频淲e91裸聊视频檝e gone through everything in the last five years, whether it91裸聊视频檚 been droughts or hurricanes,91裸聊视频 he said. 91裸聊视频淏ut this year really, really took its toll on us.91裸聊视频

Mike Williams of Ponoka, Alta., said the weather was so dry when the season began that he irrigated his farm with 12,000 litres of water every week for two months. And while this season91裸聊视频檚 crop of 3,000 pumpkins was comparable to last year91裸聊视频檚, his expected revenue won91裸聊视频檛 cover the cost of the water bill.

Williams, who owns Mill Tower Ranch, said farming is a 91裸聊视频済amble.91裸聊视频

91裸聊视频淔armers are the best gamblers in the world.91裸聊视频

Tam Andersen of Prairie Gardens, a 10-hectare farm in Sturgeon County, Alta., said she had a 50-per-cent drop in her pumpkin crop this year. Her farm specializes in blue pumpkins, which have a bluish shell and meat with a sweetish, dry taste, she said.

Although her farm is north of the 56th parallel, she said she was hit with similar weather vagaries as most of the other farmers in Canada.

91裸聊视频淲e planted into ankle deep dust on a whiff and a prayer that it would rain,91裸聊视频 Anderson said.

91裸聊视频淓ventually it did rain but not till July and then it never stopped raining,91裸聊视频 she said. 91裸聊视频淪o we got 25 inches of water in a month, which is pretty much our annual precipitation. The things on the high ground died of drought and the things in the low ground, which were doing splendidly, died drowning. The middle ground was what was left.91裸聊视频

Farmers are used to variable weather: some seasons are good while others are bad, she said. But because of climate change, she added, a single season could have multiple extremes.

91裸聊视频淲e had our driest ever and our wettest ever back to back within two months of each other. How in the world can you plan for a crop or plan for a harvest when you have 60 days of pure drought followed by 60 days of flooding followed by 60 days when we91裸聊视频檙e again in drought?91裸聊视频

Not all pumpkin farmers suffered this season, however. Roy Phillips, owner of the Phillips91裸聊视频 Family Farm, in northwest London, says he91裸聊视频檚 having a crop 91裸聊视频渕aybe even a little bit better than normal.91裸聊视频

91裸聊视频淚t91裸聊视频檚 been weird. Back in the summertime, I didn91裸聊视频檛 think that we had a good crop, but they were there. I couldn91裸聊视频檛 really have wished for a better crop.91裸聊视频

The rains came on time 91裸聊视频 although they were followed by drought, which left a few green pumpkins on the vine on his four-hectare farm that won91裸聊视频檛 make it to the shops or into jack-o91裸聊视频-lanterns, he said.

But just because this year was good, Phillips said there91裸聊视频檚 no guarantee it will be a similar result next season.

91裸聊视频淭hat91裸聊视频檚 the thing,91裸聊视频 he said with a laugh. 91裸聊视频淵ou pays your money and you takes your chances.91裸聊视频

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