Vermont Farmers Weather Crop Losses, 'Devastation,' From Severe Flooding

Jul 13, 2023

By Abagael GilesElodie Reed

Flooding at the Intervale in Burlington, which sits along the Winooski River

 

The Vermont Agency of Agriculture has released a resource page for farmers beginning to assess the damage from this week's floods.

It provides instructions for what farmers can do about crop losses, if they have to dump milk because trucks can't get to their road, and where they can go for emergency funds.

While the state hasn't yet provided any preliminary damage estimates to Vermont's farms, the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont said in a press release Wednesday that more than 40 farms have reported being impacted by this week's severe flooding.

NOFA-VT said those impacts range from isolated losses of fields and/or equipment to "complete devastation." The organization noted many farms are still in the early stages of assessing damage, after floodwaters began to recede last night.

One of the produce farms that experienced severe flooding was the Intervale Community Farm in Burlington.

Farm manager Andy Jones says while Vermont rivers crested on Monday and Tuesday further south, things were peaking in Burlington this morning.

And he says the result was somewhat worse than Tropical Storm Irene in 2011.

"[T]here was probably a two to three acre patch in the middle of 350 acres in the Intervale that were above water during Irene," Jones said. "This time, it was maybe an acre or something."

While most of their buildings escaped a lot of damage, Jones says the farm lost all of its crops, minus what they could harvest with the help of volunteers on Monday.

"Everything left behind is 100% loss," he said. "We're at a time of year when the replanting window is really short, because there just aren't that many more growing-degree days left. And many crops, it's already, it's already too late in the season to replant."

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