Are there any spring run-off models out yet? I know some areas around here may be high depending on March snowfall and speed of melt when it does start.
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grrrr
Know exactly what you are talking about. Have
two quarters that thanks to my neighbor, I can
be sure to lose anywhere between 20 and 30
acres per quarter with any amount of snow. That
is just the one area of the field. In the 70's and
80's might of lost 5 acres with any amount of
snow in that same one area.
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Our land would be worthless without the drainage, our creek and C&D ditches are registered and we pay into them to cover any downstream costs and am sure if there are any problems a person can file for compensation. A farm my size should do 7 to 10 days of ditch maintenance per year in my area sometimes a lot of times end up helping moving a nieghbours water but is the way it goes. Not sure what to say for the areas that cannot co operate. Maybe soon you will be bought out by the corporate investors for nothing and then it will get done then. Gee guys why fight about it.
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grr, a few years ago we had one serious spring rain rain rain, drainage ditches started running when the snow melted and did not stop, even after freeze up in late fall there was still water running. My dad could not remember a year we had so much rain, but in the 50's there was a a couple years where they had a lot of rain. In fact there was a couple years there was not hardly a crop planted. At least that year we planted around the sloughs and running water then all the little wedges in between. Not sure where your coming from with wetlands don't cause floading wetlands are not farm land.
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Exactly. Wetlands are not farmland. But many think they should be farmland. That's what starts the fights. People are ready to shoot each other over drainage. One gains while another loses. A wetland that has been around since the last ice age gets drained and everyone downstream has to deal with the extra water. Yes there are areas that would not be farmable without drainage. I get that. But the water doesn't magically "disappear". It has to go somewhere. Look at what is happening to Lake Winnipeg. How long can we continue to ruin one of the planets largest freshwater lakes without nature coming back to bite us. Remember, nature always holds the trump card.
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