“With a wet spring on our hands, we were like a lot of farmers and we were so late getting into the field which resulted in idle soil resting for a long time with plenty of heat units beaming down and not being used in photosynthetic activity,” says Rookes. “It actually hurts us now to see our fields idle and not capturing the power of a cover crop. And believe me, we have experienced every benefit of the cover crops and I just don’t have the time to talk about them all!”
According to Ryan Canart, AWWD general manager, programs like the MFGA Conservation Trust Project and the Prairie Watershed Climate Project funded by the On Farm Climate Action Fund of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and led by Manitoba Association of Watersheds in Manitoba and Saskatchewan are empowering watershed districts and ag groups like MFGA to engage more often and more meaningfully with farmers and producers on the soil health front.
“Programs like this cover crop program that the Rookes are enrolled in really help build healthy soils, which is one of the main things we can do to help buffer farm lands against volatile weather patterns, such as the crush of rain in our Watershed District in 2022 and the impacts of drought on those same lands in 2021", said Canart. "Healthy soils really help on that extreme weather front, as Bray will happily tell you,”
Rookes nods to the leadership and collaboration of the AWWD and says projects such as those offered via groups such as MFGA through excellent funding partners such as the Conservation Trust allow young farmers the opportunity to improve their soil to be more profitable and resilient on their farms.
“Every citizen can be proud to see the progress our local agriculture has been making at massive goals such as climate change, watershed function, soil and human health,” says Rookes. “This is an opportunity to speak on the successes of the watershed and agriculture. I would like to get this story out to the people that support farmers and the watershed. They deserve to hear the progress they have helped accomplish.”