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Taber corn creamed by heavy hail, strong wind

Taber corn, that tasty sweet treat on the cob that Albertans look forward to in late summer, will be much harder to find this year after a major storm ripped through the province's southern corn belt this week.

Producers say fast-moving storm wiped out numerous fields full of crop that was nearly ready for harvest

A sign welcomes visitors to Taber, in southern Alberta. (CBC)

Taber corn, that tasty sweet treat on the cob that Albertans look forward to in late summer, will be much harder to find this year after a major storm ripped through the province's southern corn belt this week.

Loonie and golf ball-size hailstones driven by a wind that reached more than 140 km/h tore into an area Tuesday evening that included the communities of Taber and Barnwell.

The fast-moving system wiped out several fields of corn, which some producers say had stood about two metres tall before the disaster struck.

Numerous buildings and trees were also damaged and in one instance nearly all the vinyl siding on a wall of a Mennonite church in Barnwell was stripped off.

Grower James Molnar says Taber corn is typically available for about 50 days, but the storm has prematurely ended the season.

He says what had already been harvested will likely be quickly snapped up.

"It's done. There won't be another dozen picked," said Molnar. "One side is OK on the cob, the other side is just like you put it on a cement floor and rolled it and it turned into cream corn."

Molnar said when he checked his property, he found stalks slashed and beaten to no more than 10 to 60 centimetresin height a complete loss.

He said down the road at Johnson Fresh Farms, considered the biggest corn grower in the area, the loss is estimated at 90 to 95 per cent.

"It's basically a write-off," said Tom Johnson with Johnson Fresh Farms. "It's pretty devastating for our family and for those who help us market our product."

The damage was done in the span of "a really bad 10 minutes," he added.

Molnar Taber Corn and Pumpkins supplies both vegetables to Safeway and Sobeys stores in Lethbridge, as well as 20 grocery stores in Calgary.

The family also grows squash, cabbages, peppers, tomatoes and onions, but nearly all of those crops have been lost as well.

"We have insurance, but it basically comes up probably 15 to 20 per cent short of our costs," said Molnar, who asks that people pray for the farmers in the area.

Molnar's Taber Corn says they've already sold out of the 80 sacks of corn already picked, and thanked everyone for the messages and kind words of support on their Facebook page. (Molnar's Taber Corn/Facebook)

Other crops damaged, too

Merrill Harris, the reeve of the M.D. of Taber, said corn wasn't the only crop damaged by the storm.

"Sugarbeets, corn, potatoes, cereal crops, grains all of them have been hit and a lot of them have been totally wiped out," he said.

The sugarbeets can recover with a reduced yield, he added, but it's too late in the season for most of the other crops to recover from the damage.

"The grain and the corn, they're done."

Harris said he's seen plenty of wind and hail in southern Alberta over the years but what blew through on Tuesday evening was exceptional.

"We've seen some nasty storms come through, but this one was big and bad," he said. "If you were out in the middle of it, you just couldn't believe what was going on around you."

Canadian Press via LethbridgeNewsNOW, CFFR, with files from CBC News