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It was a good drying day up here yesterday farmers were sowing fertiliser...... Looks fucked today
There's was too much last year and now the same's happening again for '24 . . .
There will be no relief from rain and sodden ground for farmers in the coming days, as according to Met Éireann's farming forecast, rainfall amounts will be two to four times the normal range.
In its farming bulletin, the national forecaster said the week ahead will be unsettled, bringing showers and rain and some heavy downpours at times.
It said soil conditions in fields are expected to worsen due to the rain.
Conditions at the moment are preventing planting and turning livestock out of sheds.
The forecaster said moderately or poorly drained soils will be waterlogged and all other soils will be saturated with all the forecast rainfall.
The farming forecast issued yesterday comes ahead of the publication of Met Éireann's analysis of March weather later today.
It is expected to show rainfall amounts in Ireland were 140% compared to normal, while amounts in some weather stations in the east and south of the country exceeded 200%, including Dublin Airport where rainfall was 219%, and the Phoenix Park where it was 211%.
Across farming sectors, the bad weather has severely hampered spring operations, preventing cows and cattle being turned out to graze fields where grass growth has been good.
In a normal year, animals that had been housed over the winter would generally be in fields by day and night by the beginning of April.
Grain farmers are also struggling to plant. They have seed stored up and ready to go, but field conditions mean machinery cannot be deployed on wet soils.
The potato sector is one that is being badly affected by wet soils in fields.
Irish Farmers' Association's National Potato chairperson Sean Ryan said early planting that should have gone ahead in February did not, and only a fraction of the main crop that normally gets planted in mid-March is in the ground.
He said the current bad weather comes after last year's harvest was one of the most difficult in recent memory, when many growers forced to leave potatoes in the ground as conditions prevented them being harvested.
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Potato shortage looms as farmers face ongoing bad weather
Irish Farmers' Association's National Potato chairperson Sean Ryan has said there is a likelihood of potato shortages in supermarkets later in the year as less than 50 acres of the usual 21,000 acres have actually been planted so far.www.rte.ie
I was going to ask a local farmer what his opinion on the report was until I heard He's quite proud to mix "Truth with Lies" - Straight from the horses mouth.![]()
Sure I guess we can add that to a list of weather disrupters, perhaps we may see a dry period too, after all El Nino also brings droughts through it's nature.Appears to be something to do with a strong El Nino year and its effect on the gulf stream.
Sure I guess we can add that to a list of weather disrupters, perhaps we may see a dry period too, after all El Nino also brings droughts through it's nature.![]()
It has been very unusual, and if this is the explanation then at least we can expect it to subside sometime. Of course, I'm on the shores of Lake Geneva so everything's dandy from my pov.
Liquid sunshine, that's what it is.
So what shall we do about it?Irish Farmers' Association's National Potato chairperson Sean Ryan has said there is a likelihood of potato shortages in supermarkets later in the year as less than 50 acres of the usual 21,000 acres have actually been planted so far.
Mr Ryan's comments came as Met Éireann's farming forecast said there will be no relief from rain and sodden ground for farmers in the coming days as rainfall amounts will be two to four times the normal range.
He said: "Yes, it's very likely at this stage because there was 700 acres that were not harvested at all last year and most of them were damaged with frost, so they are gone out of the equation.
"The situation is going to be very tight and there probably will be empty shelves in supermarkets by the end of the year."
Mr Ryan said early planting that should have gone ahead in February did not, and only a fraction of the main crop that normally gets planted in mid-March is in the ground.
He said the current bad weather comes after last year's harvest was one of the most difficult in recent memory, when many growers forced to leave potatoes in the ground as conditions prevented them being harvested.
![]()
Potato shortage looms as farmers face ongoing bad weather
Irish Farmers' Association's National Potato chairperson Sean Ryan has said there is a likelihood of potato shortages in supermarkets later in the year as less than 50 acres of the usual 21,000 acres have actually been planted so far.www.rte.ie
I'm on clay and it's a huge problem. The main issue is that it's more or less unbeatable, because it never becomes porous. This is in Australia mind you, Irish clay is likely different. The way it works here is that let's say I dig a 1.5M X1.5M trench for fruit trees, and fill it with good soil, all this does is create a well. Because the clay doesn't drain, water simply pools in the hole and the roots rot out. Some things like mangos can handle it. Things like lychees just die more or less in days.Yea and the way the last few years have been - the rain stops for weeks on end and everything goes to dust with the heavy clay soils around here. The balance we once had is gone.
Have you ever thought of moving back to your native Connemara from Kerry M'Lady?I'm on the West coast and everything is well behind or rotting.
I'm sorry for your loss. It's hard to lose dogs. I've got collies, always had them, and it's heartbreaking every time I have to put one down. I always say 'that's the last time, I can't handle it again' and always end up with another pup. I do the same thing, always bury them and plant a tree on the grave. I find digging the grave helps a bit psychologically somehow.I planted an apple tree over my black lab retriever's grave today ( the ashes not the whole dog). Crazy conditions. As you say, it does not drain. Apples can usually handle it these parts
That's no harm. Nasty little critters.Things like lychees just die more or less in days.
sighThat's no harm. Nasty little critters.
Unless they're still used for sucking bad blood out of wounds?
That's for the farmers and gov reps to decide, it's their country, their industry.So what shall we do about it?
I have met a few Catalonians, they're nice people. Earthy. I hope it picks up for them.That's for the farmers and gov reps to decide, it's their country, their industry.
We the consumers get potatoes from a global supply chain and traditionally get delicious potatoes from Cyprus etc.
It may sound daft (as it is) but if Med countries are experiencing bigger damaging droughts as we get bigger rainfalls then perhaps we should be running a freshwater pipeline over to continental Europe and on to where it's needed.
Catalonia declares a drought emergency
Officials in Spain's northeast region of Catalonia declared a drought emergency on Thursday. Reservoirs that serve 6 million people, including the population of Barcelona, are at less than 16 per cent of their capacity, a historic low.
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Drought-stricken villages in Spain are bringing in water in tankers
Thousands living in small communities that depend on wells which are now running dry are experiencing difficulties getting water fit for consumption.www.euronews.com
A 4000-5000KM pipeline is no big deal and wetter flooded north European countries can network, we've(Ireland) just to worry about sending it to France, the UN supplies the piping, see??![]()
We can’t even build one from the Shannon to Dublin or fix those that are under the streets already.That's for the farmers and gov reps to decide, it's their country, their industry.
We the consumers get potatoes from a global supply chain and traditionally get delicious potatoes from Cyprus etc.
It may sound daft (as it is) but if Med countries are experiencing bigger damaging droughts as we get bigger rainfalls then perhaps we should be running a freshwater pipeline over to continental Europe and on to where it's needed.
Catalonia declares a drought emergency
Officials in Spain's northeast region of Catalonia declared a drought emergency on Thursday. Reservoirs that serve 6 million people, including the population of Barcelona, are at less than 16 per cent of their capacity, a historic low.
![]()
Drought-stricken villages in Spain are bringing in water in tankers
Thousands living in small communities that depend on wells which are now running dry are experiencing difficulties getting water fit for consumption.www.euronews.com
A 4000-5000KM pipeline is no big deal and wetter flooded north European countries can network, we've(Ireland) just to worry about sending it to France, the UN supplies the piping, see??![]()
I remember it well. those were the days when we actually could get sunburned out in the sun, not so in recent times.Lest we forget -
![]()
Ireland had a three-month heatwave in 1976 and the videos are AMAZING
It's hot in Ireland right now. Like, really hot. But this heatwave has nothing on the heatwave of 1976.www.irishcentral.com
Yeah = = The Global Warming is Fierce Cooling altogether ! !.
I remember it well. those were the days when we actually could get sunburned out in the sun, not so in recent times.
What a joke today's Irish summers are in comparison.
These days, the sun blocker is sprayed on, and you wouldn't even notice.
Keeping it real, good on you CC.Yeah = = The Global Warming is Fierce Cooling altogether ! !
Are you in Australia too?I planted an apple tree over my black lab retriever's grave today ( the ashes not the whole dog). Crazy conditions. As you say, it does not drain. Apples can usually handle it these parts
1976 was very hot from May to November. 1977 was a little cooler. The worst year wasLest we forget -
![]()
Ireland had a three-month heatwave in 1976 and the videos are AMAZING
It's hot in Ireland right now. Like, really hot. But this heatwave has nothing on the heatwave of 1976.www.irishcentral.com
Green!What kind of bush is it.
Its not wide, about 3 or four feet. She doesn't seem shocked. I did it a year ago and hollowed the fukk out of it but its all grown back no bother.You may have shocked it and it is sulking. Conifers take that sort of thing personally.Can you identify one leader branch that would grow up for height or is all bucket shaped![]()
Put manners on it with a chain saw Miley. It might look shite for 12 - 18 months but it will fill out nicely to it's new size.Green!
Its not wide, about 3 or four feet. She doesn't seem shocked. I did it a year ago and hollowed the fukk out of it but its all grown back no bother.
I think I might have a go at the edges and keep trimming them whilst letting the middle grown taller and thicken out. Perhaps I'll get some shape to it that way
I've tried that with a conifer type bush (hopeless at plant recognition) and it stayed brown on it's injured side forever after.Put manners on it with a chain saw Miley. It might look shite for 12 - 18 months but it will fill out nicely to it's new size.
Green!
Its not wide, about 3 or four feet. She doesn't seem shocked. I did it a year ago and hollowed the fukk out of it but its all grown back no bother.
I think I might have a go at the edges and keep trimming them whilst letting the middle grown taller and thicken out. Perhaps I'll get some shape to it that way![]()
You more or less need to prune it right back. Probably the reason this is happening is that the centre is no longer getting light exposure--direct contact with light, and the plant has written off that part of itself. Only way to bring it back into form is to trim it back so the light exposure is even across the whole plant. Use a pair of anvil lopping shears and form it into the shape you want, then maintain it. Depending on the SP this is probably what you should be doing anyway.Its 12 months now Sir so I'm hoping she'll start to fill out this Summer
Most shrubs can handle a very heavy prune. If you want it to recover well and flush out new growth faster, hit it with some of this. It really does work. Or if you have access to actual seaweed, lay a bunch of it around the roots after washing it thoroughly. It's probably the best thing you can give your soil around.Its a green leafy looking thing.
Thank's for the input Sir. I'll hammer a job on it tomorrow![]()
Are you a Westmeath man Dog? Or Longford?Not too bad here in the midlands.