Nothing to do with global climate change of course - lol
Drought fears grow as dry spell continues
Primary
Industries Minister Nathan Guy is expected to visit the parched South
Canterbury area in the next few weeks as concern mounts that it and
some other regions may be heading for a serious drought
19
January, 2015
The
Ministry for Primary Industries is monitoring the conditions in South
Canterbury, as well as North Otago, Wairarapa and southern Hawke's
Bay.
MPI
director of resource policy David Wansbrough said it had been talking
with farmers and rural support trusts on a weekly basis.
However,
he said farmers and communities appeared to be coping so far and the
Government was not planning to step in with any support measures at
this stage.
He
said staff monitor the amount of rainfall, soil moisture levels and
river levels and also get good information from people on the ground.
"Rural
support trusts, based on feedback from farmers, [tell us] how they
are coping, are there feed supplies around the place and a little bit
of context.
"If
there was a really good growing season beforehand and the people have
got lots of feed supplies in storage, that's different from if it's
come on top of a few really bad years."
Irrigation
rationed in Otago
The
Otago Regional Council said most river catchments in its area had now
hit their minimum flow levels or fallen below them.
North
and central Otago were most under stress and water for irrigation
from rivers including the Shag and Kakanui was either no longer
available or being rationed or rostered.
Council
chief executive Peter Bodeker said a 24-hour irrigation ban on the
Taieri River last week had confirmed there was also very little water
left in that system for allocation.
"What
we were looking to do was to see if there was any spare water in the
Taieri that could be allocated over and above the minimum flow and
what we found was there was very little."
Mr
Bodeker said most farmers had turned off their irrigation before the
council asked but the exercise was valuable in helping it work out
how quickly the water flowed down the river in such dry conditions.
He
said while most permit holders had been co-operating with water
rationing arrangements, the regional council had had reports of a
small number of farmers who had ignored them and continued to take
water.
Declaring
a drought won't make it rain - Feds
Federated
Farmers North Otago president Richard Strowger said the dry spell
probably felt worse because the past four years had been brilliant.
He
said the region got a lot of rain and farmers were able to grow a lot
of feed and finish a lot of stock.
But
he said people were just dealing with it and planning head.
"When
you're a farmer you have to work with Mother Nature, and she gives us
really wet periods and snow and wind and this is a really dry period
and farmers just have to deal with it because that's what they've
got.
"You
know MPI can declare it a drought but it doesn't really change
anything for a farmer, other than you know, he knows it was dry and
now officially the minister has told him it is a drought," he
said.
"Declaring
a drought is more about the whole impact on the community."
Federated
Farmers South Canterbury president Ivon Hurst said the situation was
getting desperate.
He
said the region has had long dry spells before but for the first time
irrigated farms stocked to the hilt may have their water cut off.
South
Canterbury Rural Support Trust chair David Hewson said there had been
no significant rainfall since June, which was causing problems for
all farmers.
"I've
just heard of one situation today and he's been dairy farming for
more than 15 years probably but he has run out of stock water ...
That shows you how severe it's got," he said.
"Throughout
South Canterbury people have weaned and sold lambs earlier than
normal without finishing them so people are flat out making decisions
about how they're going to manage the current situation."
MPI
said farmers could seek relief by having tax assistance through the
Inland Revenue Department, and rural support.
Federated
Farmers could deal with co-ordinating feed supplies if necessary.
Hawke's
Bay soil dries out
Hawke's
Bay Regional Council is also monitoring the dry conditions across its
region.
It
said most of the region had near normal rainfall last month, but some
areas had had either no rain or very little rain for four weeks or
more.
The
council said soil moisture levels were low and about 75 millimetres
of rain was needed to get pasture growing again.
It
said aquifer levels and flows in most Hawke's Bay rivers had been
below normal for three months or more.
Some
irrigation restrictions were already operating and the council said
if there was no significant rainfall, irrigators could expect more
bans to come into force in the coming week.
'Ideal'
for vineyards
Grape
growers said while the hot dry spell was impacting on farmers, it was
ideal for vineyards.
The
east of the South Island was experiencing a long dry spell which
began in spring.
Pegasus
Bay Winery general manager Paul Donaldson said while a little bit of
rain would not go astray, the weather was almost ideal for grapes.
He
said a hot year also made for good fruit flavours in wine such as
pinot noir.
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