Homesteaders and hobby farmers urged to plan for future extreme weather events
CBC
Homesteaders and hobby farmers on Prince Edward Island are being encouraged to prepare now for the next extreme weather event, based on lessons learned from post-tropical storm Fiona.
The UPEI ClimateSense team is hosting an information session at the Farm Centre in Charlottetown this Saturday, along with the provincial government and others involved in emergency management, on the topic of small farm emergency preparedness.
Rebecca Cowans is with a group called P.E.I. Homesteading & Animal Husbandry, and has chickens and geese on her property on the Island's North Shore.
"Small farmers don't have the access to the information that commercial farming would have," Cowans said.
"Homesteaders, we all have livestock and so just [need] a little bit more information on how to prepare for events like Fiona in the future, and even wildfires too — any type of emergency."
Cowans said she was without power for more than a week after post-tropical storm Fiona struck the Island last September, so was concerned for her animals.
"When you have livestock, the biggest concern is getting water for your animals. They'll need fresh water every day. The other thing to consider is your feed, definitely making sure you have enough feed and shavings [for] bedding before an event," she said.
"A lot of that stuff is shipped in from off island, so if there's problems with transportation, that's going to slow those things from getting here."
Staff from the provincial Agriculture Department will be attending the session and distributing small-farm guidebooks for emergencies that they have created.
The session will also include presentations from the provincial veterinarian, FireSmart Canada, and the Emergency Animal Response Team.
Ron McConnell said his group was busy in the days following Fiona.
Calls came in from "people that had no electricity but had small herds of cattle or horses, and they didn't have backup power of any kind. They didn't have a way of getting water to their animals or getting feed out to them," McConnell said.
"I ended up going out with 45-gallon drums of water to drop off at a couple of farms so that the cattle had enough to drink until Maritime Electric was able to restore power to the facility."
McConnell said there were also situations where animals needed to be moved from damaged quarters.
The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.