Originally posted by SASKFARMER3
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Originally posted by grassfarmer View PostHere you go, add it up on your phone (on second thoughts maybe use a calculator in case your phone can't count any better than it spells!)
[ATTACH]3158[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH]3159[/ATTACH]
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostI just used the same site ( Eldorado Weather.com) Looks like Grassfarmer Manitoba location gets 514.8, my closest station Rocky Mountain House( I'm probably almost as far SE of there as Grassfarmer was N of there before he moved?) RMH gets 535.8mm, only 20 mm more as he stated. But, critically for growing grass, we get way more in the summer, he gets more in the winter. We get 48% more June rain on average than Ninette Manitoba. June is our monsoon month, excellent timing for growing hay and grass.
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Originally posted by SASKFARMER3 View PostAgain it’s a estimate or guess from 100 km away. Vs a on farm station. As you two know rain follows patterns some area gets more rain even were you farm always.
I know my rainfall and it’s accurate not a guess but keep posting it’s hilarious
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Oh you fool that was so funny I dropped my morning coffee
It spit again last night I guess I’ll add the tenth.
Maybe in Scotland it rained in whole area and a average could be done.
But the stations they are using is across the valley a very deep hole with lakes that effect the weather and rain.
Throw in the large forest area of reserve to the north and us being parkland.
All effect weather but yea your so smart you got it all figured out this graph proves it has to be true.
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Every time I see pictures like these, or read anything about the Palouse or similar areas, it makes me wonder about the theory that the world is flooded with grains. If we have to go to such extents to find enough land to grow crops on, with the associated soil degradation that goes along with farming a nearly 45 degree slope, we must be very desperate to meet demand.
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