Vendors at Regina Farmers Market feeling impacts of drought
From those who sell organic produce, to those who bring homemade Saskatchewan hot sauce or mead to the Regina Farmerâs Market, a wide array of vendors are feeling the ripple effects from perpetual drought conditions this summer.
âWell the groundâs super cracked and really dry, but itâd be good to get some rain in the next few days or whenever,â said Simon Boutin, who was at the market on Wednesday on behalf of his familyâs business, Heliotrope Organic Farm.
Read more: Precipitation forecast for Saskatchewan no match for drought: expert
âWeâre managing â" you do what you can,â Boutin said.
He says the family has had to water their crops a lot more than usual in order to salvage them.
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Harry Shaw and his wife live in B.C. and theyâve brought their fresh produce to the Regina market at their stall named âKimâs B.C. Fruitâ for the past 40 years.
Shawâs wife is from Regina and so theyâve always tried to stay connected to the city.
Read more: B.C. residents encouraged to curb water use as drought conditions grow
He says theyâve never experienced devastating conditions like this before as theyâve lost 50 per cent of their apples, along with some other popular sellers.
âAny of the smooth-skinned fruit takes a beating with the heat, the cherries would split, or you know just overheat and shrivel up because itâs so hot, when theyâre still immature,â he explained.
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Even those selling hot sauce are feeling the burn from the persistent heat and minimal rain.
âIt has been difficult and further-reaching for some of the chili peppers as local producers have not been able to get the crops they need to fulfill our orders, habaneros especially,â said Cecilia Swanson, co-owner of Mike Bites Food Co.
âI donât know what it is about them, but theyâve just been so hard to reach,â she added.
Swanson said she and her husband just kicked off their business this year after both of them were let go from their jobs in the restaurant industry due to the pandemic.
Read more: Saskatchewan government announces aid for livestock producers struggling with drought
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Meanwhile, if youâre looking for some melon-flavoured mead at the market this year, then youâll be fresh out of luck.
âWe produce all of this just 20 minutes west of Moose Jaw and we have a U-pick garden, which hasnât really done well this year,â said David Turnmire, a salesperson with Prairie Bee Meadery.
âWe do make a melon mead, but we canât grow melons this year, itâs just too dry,â he added.
Although itâs been a tough year already, the vendors say theyâre incredibly thankful for all the local support theyâre receiving.
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