
Strawberry season hits stride amid ideal picking conditions

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CBC
5 days ago
- CBC
What makes the St. Lawrence River so dangerous for swimmers?
It's an important waterway in North America, but conditions in the St. Lawrence River can change rapidly and its size and force makes rescues complicated and dangerous for emergency responders.


CTV News
6 days ago
- CTV News
‘Perfect conditions for picking': Berry farms around Edmonton prepare for big season
Berry farms are opening their picking season in the Edmonton area, on July 20, 2025. (Marek Tkach/CTV News Edmonton) Berry farmers in the Edmonton area are thanking the rain as they prepare for a huge picking season this summer. Horse Hill Berry Farm located northeast of Edmonton opened their gates to berry pickers last week with plenty of raspberries up for grabs. • The information you need to know, sent directly to you: Download the CTV News App Anna Clunas, the marketing manager for the farm, told CTV News Edmonton their opening day was one for the books. '(It) was one of the best opening days we've had in years, and maybe ever … I think there (were) close to 200 people that came out,' Clunas said Sunday. She said heavy rain in May and June resulted in the amount of berries produced this season and hopes more pickers come to keep the momentum going. 'Our weekend was a little slow this opening week because of the weather, but today (was) perfect conditions for picking. Not too hot, not too sunny, and no rain,' she said. 'If the weather holds out for next weekend and for the rest of the week, we expect lots of folks to keep coming out to pick.' According to Tim Darragh, the owner of the Big Rock Berry Farm located southeast of the city, plenty of visitors have been coming through taking buckets of berries. 'We get lots of interest from our loyal pickers early on within the berry patch, and they come out in full force the first three or four times that we open up,' said Darragh. 'We've got probably more berries on the trees than we've ever seen … and the size of the berries is fantastic,' he added. Darragh said it typically takes a person 20 to 30 minutes to pick an entire bucket in previous years, but this year pickers are clearing 10 to 15 minutes. 'It's easy picking for them, and that just makes it that much easier for them to come out and enjoy their time.' The Horse Hill Berry Farm and Big Rock Berry Farm websites have additional information about their picking schedule posted online. With files from CTV News Edmonton's Marek Tkach


CBC
6 days ago
- CBC
Hail-focused research projects 'long past due' in Canada, U.S., prof says
A new project that aims to better predict when hail will hit and how big it will be might save people big bucks in damage repairs someday. Project ICECHIP (In-situ Collaborative Experiment for the Collection of Hail In the Plains) involved dozens of researchers who spent six weeks chasing, driving and running into storms across the Great Plains in the U.S. to collect fresh hail and study it by measuring, weighing, slicing and crushing the stones to reveal what's inside. Researchers hope the hailstones will reveal secrets about storms, damage and maybe the air itself. The research was done to help improve radar-based hail detection, hail models and forecasting. The aim is to better predict hailstorms and lessen the costly damage they cause. The project, which was the largest hail-focused study in the U.S. in over four decades, involved two teams of researchers, 15 different research institutions and three international partners — including Canada's Northern Hail Project. Becky Adams-Selin, Project ICECHIP's lead principal investigator, says although hail is a worldwide problem, it hasn't gotten much attention until recent decades because it "doesn't kill people like tornadoes do." "There was a lot of focus on tornadoes first to kind of get that warning system down, which makes sense," she said. "Hail didn't really start hitting people's pocketbooks until maybe the last two decades." 40,000 hail-related claims Hail, combined with urban sprawl and deteriorating roofing materials, has created "a perfect storm," she said, and insurance companies are starting to feel the pinch. "It's become a lot more evident that some of the things we don't know about hail are really causing a lot of problems," Adams-Selin said. Data from Manitoba's public auto insurer suggests how the number of hailstorms has varied in the province over the last five years. Manitoba Public Insurance says it has received over 40,000 hail-related claims since 2021. There were 1,300 hail-related claims in 2021 and nearly 3,700 claims in 2022, but the number skyrocketed in 2023, with nearly 28,000 claims submitted. It received almost 9,300 hail-related claims in 2024. So far this year, MPI has gotten just over 700 claims submitted as of Friday. a temporary hail-damage estimate centre in order to deal with a barrage of claims, on top of claims from a massive storm in Winnipeg in August 2023 that brought golf-ball-sized hail to some areas, MPI said. Hail-focused research in Canada and the U.S. is "long past due," said John Hanesiak, a professor at the University of Manitoba's department of environment and geography who works with the Northern Hail Project, which is conducting similar research in Alberta this summer. "This is sort of one of the first projects that's been dedicated to hail [in the U.S.] in 40 years, and the same thing can be said in Canada," he said. Canada's last major hail-focused research project was the Alberta Hail Project, which ran from 1956 to 1985, Hanesiak said. Predicting when hail will hit and how big it will be is "an evolving science," but cutting open a hailstone and analyzing its shape and density can give researchers a better idea of how it grew, he said. "If we're able to measure at the ground, if we're able to measure the size distributions of the hail and collect hailstones from real storms, we can much better understand how they grow in certain conditions." Weather balloons can also help researchers understand what meteorological conditions produce specific hailstorms and hail sizes, but Hanesiak said weather balloons are limited in Canada. The balloons gather weather data from the upper atmosphere, including temperature, humidity and air pressure. In southern parts of Saskatchewan and Manitoba, there are no readings from weather balloons, he said. Hanesiak said his hope is that the projects will help researchers determine whether there are any differences between American and Canadian hailstorms. Keith Porter, chief engineer at the Ontario-based Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction, which partially funds the Northern Hail Project, says hail is rarely deadly but can be extremely costly. A Calgary hailstorm in August was Canada's most destructive weather event of 2024, damaging homes, businesses, cars and the Calgary International Airport, resulting in $3 billion in insured losses, according to Catastrophe Indices and Quantification, which provides data to the insurance industry. The best way to protect property from hail damage is by parking in a garage and installing impact-resistant roofing and siding on houses and other buildings, Porter said. "The research helps us to tell [people] what the benefit of doing that is, why they should do it, [and] what's in it for them to save." Porter said hail damage is everyone's problem.