AFTER months of drought that negatively affected crop production, Tobago farmers are relieved but nervous as heavy rain drenched the island for approximately four hours on June 10.
The Met Office has forecast more rain for the rest of the week.
The rainy season officially started on May 25 with farmers desperate for a brutal dry season, which saw water restrictions in place, to end.
Head of the Goldsborough Farmers Association, Roland Murray, said he doesn’t know what to expect now that the heavens have opened.
“You have to determine when you want to water your crops; you can’t wait on rain because sometimes you might have excessive rain which could damage your crops.
"Then you would have dry spell for another two weeks – so the plants come from the watering era into this stressful dry period.”
Murray said there hasn't been enough rain to have any huge impact as yet.
“We’re hoping that we don’t get too much rain at any one time; we hoping that we get the rain off and on because too much rain now will put us in a bad position again, because you’re coming from a severe dry season into a wet, wet season which wouldn’t agree with the plants at all.”
He added: “Right now I have down an acre of melon, and it now start to run but if I get too much rain, I could lose it.”
He said he has received a lot of calls from farmers who are telling him that the grounds are still hard.
“Up to this morning, I was talking to a farmer who said the ground was still hard, so the water really hasn’t gone anywhere as yet.”
He described the recent drought as “a terrible time” for farmers.
“The dry season was really severe this time around and farmers are really facing a terrible time. Even the plants, you’re seeing the stress on the plants itself.
"Farmers were affected badly, the production level cut a lot, only farmers who have access to the river in close proximity (thrived), and that is only 15 per cent, other than that the rest of farmers suffered tremendously.”
Head of the Argyle United Farmers Development Group Ramish Radgman said he grows papaya, noting that there are a lot more farmers in the area. The amount of rainfall, he said, is a cause for concern.
“The drainage system in Argyle is in the worst state that you could ever think about. The rains is making farming worse because the drainage system is deplorable.
"You have no proper drainage system, no proper roads – as a matter of fact, you can't even go on to the lands as the rains is falling because the roadway is immerse in water. There is no proper run-off system, it is only dirt – no proper drainage.”
He does not see food security and food sustainability for the island in the near future.
“All of that is just old talk and mamaguy. If the powers that be is really serious, the people that really want to do serious farming, they would get behind them and let us try to provide food for the people of Tobago and by extension Trinidad and the world, because I am seeing more talk than action.”
He described the recent dry season as very bad.
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