After a few years of drought, this asparagus farmer in Cambridge welcomes wet weather - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

After a few years of drought, this asparagus farmer in Cambridge welcomes wet weather

The rainfall so far this summer has been good news for local farmers, especially after two years of dry summers. The owner of Barrie's Asparagus Farm in Cambridge says his crop relies heavily on rain and welcomes the wet weather.

Barrie said recent weather patterns has him worriedfor anyone who wants to become a farmer

A tree in the foreground with a green field in the back.
Farmers like Tim Barrie said the wet weather the region has been experiencing is welcomed news after two years of drought. But recent weather patterns has him concerned for farmers now and those looking to get into the industry. (Tim Barrie/Twitter)

The pasttwo years has seen somedry conditionsin Waterloo region, so the amount of rain so far this summerhas been good news forfarmers likeTim Barrie, owner of Barrie's Asparagus Farm in Cambridge.

"I remember last year, we had one inch of rain," Barrie told CBC Kitchener-Waterloo'sThe Morning Editionhost Craig Norris on Monday.

Though it was a drier spring for him, Barrie said the amount of rain the region's seen over the last two weeks has helped his asparagus fern grow to more than 1.8 metrescompared to last yearwhen they only grew to 1.3 metres by the end of the season.

"There was a lot of worry and then the season ended and all this rain that seemed to never comehas come so frequently," he said.

"It's been amazing ... we got over six feet of fern in two weeks since we stopped harvestingand we never had that all year. It's these swings we're seeing in the weather and what we weren't getting, we're now getting in abundance."

The University of Waterloo's weather station reportedlast year's total rainfall for the region was 580 mm. This year's total so faris already at 476 mm.

Geoff Coulson, a warning preparedness meteorologist from with Environment Canada, told CBC News different weather patterns can settle in during the summer months as different systems move through the Great Lakes area, bringing spotty rainfall and more severe storms.

"Some areas get really heavy downpours and other areas are not getting as much," he said.

"Certainly the pattern we've been in over the last number of days and going forwardfor the next week or sois slightly cooler than normal and and somewhat more unsettled than normal."

'Feast or famine with the weather'

Barrie said the weather in recent years "feels off," noting in his are of the region, theywould get no rain sometimes, even though the forecast would call for a high chance of showers.

"Take last year, after harvest, we didn't get any rain in the entire summer. All those 80 or 90 [per cent change of showers] turned into nothing and then this year for it to continue on in the spring," he said.

"You're listening to the weather forecast and you're also hearing about smoke, forest fires ... in your brain, it's hard to process because we're in the spring and you're hearing about forest fires and no rain," he added.

"Something has definitely changes and it seems like feast or famine with the weather."

Barrie said this has him worriedfor anyone who wants to become a farmer and says people in the industry have to be prepared to work in a different climate.

He said now, farmers are faced with different questions, especially around rain.

"I didn't face that years ago. It was a matter of it's coming, we just don't know when, versus now: Is it coming at all?"