My son works out of Canmore and said this the Lowest snow pack since records have been kept in the 50's. Fire season could be a BAD one
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Spring runoff and empty dugouts etc??
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
-
No runoff here. Snow almost gone. No subsoil moisture. Dugouts/sloughs never filled….gonna need timely rains, or it could be slim pickin’s
Comment
-
Originally posted by fcr View PostOne to two feet of heavy wet snow this week in Alberta will fill some water holes and recharge any dry ground. Looks like ditto here in most of Sask.
could be significant in some areas
hopefully a few posters on here like Hemloc and Helmsdale get a pile of moisture from that system
Galaxy May even get a fair amount .
- Likes 4
Comment
-
They took the snow and cold out of the forecast for us. There was some trickles of runoff off the hills but it’s done already. Friends invited us over for a fire the other night since it won’t be long before that can’t happen if things don’t change. Lots of dugouts were too low last year and not looking good on that front. I think we’ll be putting in a bunch of waterline this spring if Ma Nature doesn’t change things up soon.
Blowing and +15 today……….
Fun times
- Likes 1
Comment
-
We have a surprising amount of runoff, considering we had virtually no snow all winter. And we already had one runoff event a month and a half ago. All from the snow we've got in the last few weeks. It was a short-lived snowmobile season locally. I only plowed snow once all winter.
At home the fields are still White. Water is running, but nowhere near the peak yet. A few miles Southwest we have land that is already bare. A few miles Southeast I have a quarter that has already peaked a few days ago. And 20 mi East we have land that still looks like winter.
Same story every spring.
Small area is the last place to lose its snow, the last place to get leaves on the trees.
And at the other end of the season, with the last place to lose the leaves and the last place to quit growing no matter how dry it is.
Sounds like we have a foot or more of snow in the forecast.
Comment
-
The big slough by our yard is receding again. In my short life I’ve seen it go dry and be farmed for 12 years, fill up to 13’ depth and start to recede. Since the family has been here it has done this 3 other times. Looks to be on a 30 year timeframe. My kid is licking his lips cause his field is growing. That was one of my first fields as well. Doesn’t bode well for surface water. This was the first winter I never sent the cows out to the hills to winter because of no snow to pick. Even spring picking could be tough as our plentiful sloughs are drying out. Should be adequate but it’s a concern. In the drought years before we had lots of dugouts in slough bottoms so that should hold us but I’ve seen them dry out in extreme drought. It’ll be serious if a significant moisture event doesn’t come our way soon. Grass is pooched without April moisture.
- Likes 3
Comment
-
Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
Looks like a prolonged wet snow event Red Deer to Medicine Hat and through SW Alberta
could be significant in some areas
hopefully a few posters on here like Hemloc and Helmsdale get a pile of moisture from that system
Galaxy May even get a fair amount .
Dug a hole for the car-chasing dog here two days ago. Dampish soil for the top 3-4", then absolutely nothing below that. You can drive nearly anywhere you want with a two wheel drive truck in stubble fields currently.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by helmsdale View Post
Finger, Toes, and Nuts thoroughly crossed!
Dug a hole for the car-chasing dog here two days ago. Dampish soil for the top 3-4", then absolutely nothing below that. You can drive nearly anywhere you want with a two wheel drive truck in stubble fields currently.
Comment
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment