Your farm flooded. Now what?
Morning from the junction — here's what's moving in Melfort.
There's a family out in the RM of Connaught right now, probably wondering how their life got turned upside down this week. They had to leave their farm, by boat, because of rising floodwaters. "It's grief," is how the family put it. That's a direct quote, and it tells you everything you need to know about what it feels like to watch your livelihood float away. It’s not just water; it’s years of work, generations maybe, all under threat.
This isn't just some abstract news story; it hits home for anyone around Melfort. We're in the Carrot River Valley, some of the most productive black loam in the country. Our economy, our entire way of life, hinges on the land. When you hear about flooding like this, especially after a winter with heavy snowpack, you start looking at the water levels on the Carrot River and wondering how bad it’s going to get upstream. It affects everything from spring seeding plans to the prices at the co-op down on Main Street. The Water Security Agency is saying more melt is coming with warmer temperatures, and that's not good news for already saturated areas.
### What This Means for Melfort
* **Agricultural Impact:** Farmers already dealing with tight margins can't afford these kinds of setbacks. This affects our entire trading area, from Star City to Tisdale.
* **Infrastructure Stress:** Roads and bridges take a beating with high water. That impacts how goods, and people, move through the junction.
* **Community Support:** When folks are hurting, the community steps up. It’s the Saskatchewan way, and you’ll see it in Melfort.
This is a stark reminder that as much as we talk about hockey and the Mustangs at the Kerry Vickar Centre, the land and its unpredictable nature are always the main event in Melfort. We’re a junction city, connecting people and goods, but that connection gets complicated when the land decides to reclaim its own.
Jack Lawson, MiTL Sports Desk, Melfort.
Keith and the crew break this down every morning — catch it live at mornings.live.