The Rural Voice, 1979-05, Page 12information was utilized by farmers in both Perth and Huron
counties.
Then in November 1978, a government cutback resulted in the
line to London weather office being discontinued.
Brad Finch, of the London weather office, said his office can
still get the radar information from Toronto once an hour, but the
information is less detailed than when they received it directly
from Exeter.
VERY DETAILED
He said the information his office received prior to the cutback
was so detailed that if a farmer could tell weathermen where his
farm was, then they could tell him if showers were predicted, in
that immediate area.
When the service was cut back Lloyd Moore of Palmerston,
owner of Moore's Produce in Listowel, was one of several people
who submitted briefs objecting to the cutback in service.
Mr. Moore said, "The radar weather coverage from Exeter is
now only sent to Toronto, where it is decoded and a generalized
summary is sent back to London every hour. London weather is
not able to pinpoint the storms with this information and by the
time they get it is outdated. It is hard to get a phone line free at
Toronto, but when you do they do not pinpoint the weather for
you and seem to be only interested in I.F.R. airline traffic."
The brief said the detailed weather information from the
London office was used by construction firms, by farmers,
transports and buses who can reroute or cancel trips with the
available weather information and by schools who used the
information to know when students should be sent home in the
winter to avoid serious storms.
Mr. Finch said if the weather radar service wasreinstated, it
"is an area where we could improve short term forecasting in the
local area." He said his office has received "multi" complaints
about the cutback of the service from farmers, local industries,
pilots and other groups in the community.
Exeter weather station
to be re -instated
Mr. Finch had already heard a rumour the service would be
re-established when contacted by The Rural Voice. This was
confirmed later by George McPherson of the Atmospheric
Environment Service.
The radar recorder will be going back into the London weather
office in the near future - hopefully sometime in the next few
months.
When the service is re-established, farmers can again either
phone the London weather office for the forecasts directly or tune
into radio stations which broadcast the more detailed forecasts.
The case of the weather radar information seems to be one
example where pressure on MP's and MPP's paid off, and the
government decided the minimal amount of money they were
saving wasn't worth the problems it was creating.
Today, technology, better plant breeding and sprays for
disease and insect control have somewhat lessened the effects of
the weather for individual farmers.
THE OLD DAYS
Vincent Lane, a retired farmer who lives in St. Columban,
remembers the days when the weather played a very major role
in farming.
For one thing, today, he said the land in Huron and Perth
counties is better drained, so farmers can go on it sooner than
they could it the days when he started farming.
When Mr. Lane and his father, the first to own a tractor in
their area, were .doing custom work in the 1920's, Mr. Lane
recalls he ran into a lot of wet spo is where he'd get stuck during
the spring planting.
PG. 10 THE RURAL VOICE/ MAY 1979
"You couldn't trust the fields then the way you can now," Mr.
Lane said.
Although Mr. Lane doesn't claim to be a scientist, from his
own observations he believes winters today are less severe than
they were in this younger days. But he does remember one
winter that was an exception to even this observation -in either
1929 or 30, the land didn't freeze until mid-February and the
horses and buggies were mired in mud up to their axles.
Mr. Lane has seen a number of changes in farming since he
started in the 1920's. In those days, oats and barley were the
common crops, with only a bit of corn planted. Mr. Lane said
when he did grow corn, he often didn't get it harvested until the
next spring. Then as land became more expensive and earlier
maturing corn varieties were developed, cash croppers switched
to corn.
How did Mr. Lane and his father predict the weather during
planting season? Their secret was the equinoxal winds which
occured on March 21 or 22nd and approximately the same time in
September.
Mr. Lane said if the wind was blowing in the south, then they
could count on a good spring until June. However, if the wind
was in the north, it was a sign of a cool spring and "you'll seed
all right, but you'll wear your overcoats."
Acid rain and the greenhouse effect
We exhale carbon -dioxide (CO, the trees inhale it and exhale
oxygen we learned at school. This giving and taking keeps the
trees growing and the human race alive.
All burning inhales some of our oxygen and emits carbon
dioxide thus doing the same thing that we, humans and in fact all
animals do.
The fast increasing world population, particularly inthe
developing countries, is cutting down whole forests at an
alarming rate. Since they can't afford to buy coal or oil or gas to
cook on, they use manure and wood.
This would be alright, if they replanted the cut trees. But they
don't. Neither do we. Drive through Northern Ontario and see
the ravages of the pulp and paper companies. How many of our
proponents of renewable energy realize that trees are burnt but
not replaced? So the used energy is not renewed.
Scientists are becoming concerned that there may be too much
carbon dioxide accumulating in the atmosphere and the so-called
"greenhouse effect" will take place. This is like a one-way
mirror. The sun's heat can come in, but a carbon dioxide layer
will prevent it from leaving. If that should happen, the world
would become too hot to live on within hours, and would be
destroyed.
Another, more immediate danger with carbon dioxide happens
when the sun shines on it. Then it becomes, through a
photo -chemical process, ozone. Bean producers have seen their
crops destoryed by ozone, within a day.
The burning of hydro -carbons when combined with weather
has other undesirable effects. A byproduct of the smokeā¢
emissions from coal and oil fired devices is sulphur and sulphur
dioxide. When it rains, this sulphur dioxide combines with water
molecules to form acid rain. When this comes down in the
oxygen we breath, on our plants, on our automobiles, corrosion
occurs.
The corrosion in our lungs is slow and insidious. But the lakes
of Northern Ontario, that are now devoid of fish, because of acid
rain, show us that it is no idle concern.
Lest we become complacent, let's repeat the words of the
great environmental scientist, Dr. McTaggart -Gowan:
... region after region is being destroyed by a succession of
insignificant increments; which, added together are total
disaster, although each one individually might be quite
acceptable."