Alta., Man. hail claims come up nearer normal

Published: September 28, 2009

Prairie hail insurers report jumps in new claims in the last two weeks in Saskatchewan and Manitoba following storms Sept. 14-15 and Sept. 10-11 respectively.

However, the new claims haven’t derailed Saskatchewan off its track for a record-low number of crop hail claims during a growing season, the Canadian Crop Hail Association said in its report Friday.

Storms on Sept. 14-15 were responsible for the majority of about 700 new claims filed by farmers in Saskatchewan since the end of August, bringing the total for the season up to about 4,000, the association said.

Read Also

In 2024, 55 per cent of Canadian fruit and vegetable preserving and specialty food were imported according to Farm Credit Canada’s 2025 food and beverage report. That category includes frozen and canned vegetables and fruit, pickling and drying. Photo: Juanmonino/Getty Images Plus

Canadian trade tribunal to examine imports of frozen, canned vegetables

Canadian officials will look into whether global imports of frozen and canned vegetables are threatening Canadian growers and processors.

Areas filing claims for Sept. 14-15 hail events include Pangman, Milestone, Lajord, Wilcox, Pense, Lumsden, Earl Grey, Loreburn, Kenaston, Conquest, Wadena, Clair, Quill Lake, LeRoy, St. Gregor, Englefeld, Bradwell, Vanscoy, Perdue, Archerwill, Rose Valley, Muenster, Humboldt, Naicam, Rosthern, Crooked River, St. Louis, Arborfield and Prince Albert.

A record-low number of claims in Saskatchewan for the 2009 growing season would follow a record-high year for the province in 2008, the association noted.

In Manitoba, meanwhile, claims are now running “just slightly below the five-year average” at a total of over 2,500, including 800 new claims since the end of August.

Most of the new claims are from storms the night of Sept. 10 into the early morning hours of Sept. 11 that hit the province’s southeast, west of the Red River, through areas including Crystal City, Snowflake, Pilot Mound, La Riviere, Darlingford, Winkler, Plum Coulee, Thornhill, Manitou, Morden, Altona and Morris.

September has been relatively quiet for hail claims so far in Alberta, the association said. Alberta farmers’ claims for the season now stand at around 1,950.

“Hail claim payouts in Alberta should return to the normal range this year, following record payouts in 2007 and again in 2008,” the association said Friday.

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications