Farmers turn to specialized forecasting in face of rising extreme weather threat
CALGARY — In an industry that lives and dies by the weather, farmers like Dwight Foster are looking for all the help they can get to know what’s coming.
“We use every tool in the toolbox we can get our hands on to try and figure out what’s going on,” said Foster, co-owner of North Gower Grains south of Ottawa.
With about 25 farms to manage, he has signed up with a service that plants weather stations throughout his properties that tell him whether the wind is calm enough to spray his fields or if it’s dry enough to till the earth.
“It’s more high-tech than ever. We have weather stations on our farms, they’re telling us wind speed, wind direction, temperatures high and low, rainfall amounts on almost every one of our farms.”


