Damage caused by Debby | Farmers in the fog

The tropical storm Debby – which dumped record amounts of rain in the St. Lawrence Valley – has forced farmers to face a new challenge: rivers overflowing into their fields. A month after the deluge, the rivers have returned to their beds, but submerged plants are now coated in sediment, agricultural producers note helplessly.




What you need to know

  • The tropical storm Debby dumped a record amount of rain on southern Quebec on August 9. In the space of 24 hours, more than 120 mm fell, a chance that occurs every 100 years.
  • The Financière agricole du Québec has already received 382 notices of damage directly linked to Debby.
  • Large-scale crops are the most affected by the damage. After an excellent start to the season, the last few rainy weeks have been more difficult for market gardeners.

The day after the passage of Debbydairy farmer Mathieu Champagne crossed his fields in a kayak. With his sister who accompanied him on a paddleboard, they covered two kilometres as the sun set on the land of the family farm in Saint-Thomas-de-Joliette, which borders the Chaloupe River. “In some places, there was three feet of water across the field,” says the 27-year-old. “My grandfather is 84 years old and he still lives on the farm and he’s never seen anything like that.”

  • Mathieu Champagne kayaked two kilometers through his flooded fields on August 10.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY MATHIEU CHAMPAGNE

    Mathieu Champagne kayaked two kilometers through his flooded fields on August 10.

  • Sand remained in Mathieu Champagne's hayfield.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY MATHIEU CHAMPAGNE

    Sand remained in Mathieu Champagne’s hayfield.

  • Mathieu Champagne

    PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, THE PRESS

    Mathieu Champagne

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When the water receded, it left a lot of sand in his hayfield, choking his alfalfa. An almost total loss.

Sediment has also settled on corn plants intended for silage. The leaves are still stained. “Since there is soil, I really can’t give that to my cows,” explains the trained agronomist.

PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, THE PRESS

One month after the tropical storm passed DebbyMathieu Champagne’s corn is covered with a layer of earth.

Uncertainty

Johanne Pagé, a large-scale crop producer in Sainte-Élisabeth in Lanaudière, has also noticed similar spots on her crops.

“It left a residue on the plant. It’s gray and then it’s stuck to the leaves,” she explains.

PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, THE PRESS

Johanne Pagé, large-scale crop producer in Sainte-Élisabeth in Lanaudière

There, we are in uncertainty, we don’t know if we will be able to pick it or not, especially the soybeans. [destiné à l’alimentation] human.

Johanne Pagé, large-scale crop producer in Sainte-Élisabeth in Lanaudière

“Will it be marketable or not?” wonders Johanne Pagé. “It’s full of unknowns because these are not situations we’ve faced before.”

As of September 3, the Financière agricole du Québec had recorded 1,490 notices of damage due to excess rain for the 2024 growing season out of a total of 3,014.

“Among these 1,490 damage notices, the Financial estimates that 382 are related to the storm Debby for excessive rain and flooding,” confirms Karine Groleau, communications advisor for Financière agricole du Québec. “This storm particularly affected three regions: Lanaudière, Montérégie and Centre-du-Québec,” she continues.

The crops affected are mainly large crops which generally suffer less from these causes of damage.

Karine Groleau, communications advisor for the Financière agricole du Québec

On her 426-hectare family farm, Johanne Pagé grows corn, soybeans, beans and Maltese barley. The land is bordered by the Bayonne River, whose usual level rose 30 feet following the passage of the post-tropical depression Debby August 8 and 9.

PHOTO PROVIDED BY JOHANNE PAGÉ

The flooded lands of Johanne Pagé

The malted barley field is a total loss. “It was impossible, the barley was completely down and covered in this grey stuff. There was nothing you could do, you were walking through the mud that was a layer on top and it was slippery.”

His corn? “I have a field where you could no longer see any corn, the water was on top. It’s certain that the water got into the ears. Will it cause mold? It’s too early to say and it’s too early to quantify the damage to the crops, for me as well as for others,” emphasizes the woman who is also president of the Lanaudière grain producers’ union.

Record rains

According to Environment Canada, the remains of Debby caused record rainfall on August 9 in southern Quebec. In the space of 24 hours, between Montreal and Trois-Rivières, the rainfall generally exceeded 120 mm, a phenomenon that corresponds to a “100-year return period”, which makes these rains “extremely rare”, “even unique”.

“Similar amounts of rain have a chance of occurring once every 100 years,” summarizes Michèle Fleury, meteorologist at Environment Canada.

“The waterways in Quebec are generally [conçus] for 20-year recurrences,” explains engineer Robert Lagacé, a professor for 50 years in watercourse management and underground drainage at the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences at Laval University. “We know that 100-year events will overflow.”

Solutions exist, but they require significant investment. He cites the example of setting up dikes to prevent water from entering the land or underground pumping stations to lower the water table below.

“It’s a complex subject and one of the elements is that at present, there is less and less expertise at the Ministry of Agriculture to advise farmers on these issues. Farmers are a little helpless,” he notes.

And the market gardeners?

Debby may have a greater impact on market gardeners if September is rainy. Carrots, parsnips, turnips, rutabagas, beets and potatoes are the crops most at risk of suffering from excess water at this time.

“The water from August 9 came in quickly because the soil was dry,” explains the president of the Association of Market Garden Producers of Quebec, Catherine Lefebvre.

On the other hand, August was particularly rainy.

We’ve had 2-3 inches of rain every week since then. So there are a lot of crops that we’re now finding are rotting in the ground.

Catherine Lefebvre, President of the Quebec Market Gardeners Association

The situation is not widespread across the province.

“There are storage products that will not be available in the fall, but there are regions that are spared. Will there be a general shortage of stock to supply Quebec’s chains and grocery stores? At this time, I wouldn’t think so, but […] 2 inches of rain like that every week, I don’t know what it’s going to look like. The beginning of the year was superb. Then, in some areas, it’s going to be catastrophic.”


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