Your weather worries are back, Abbotsford
Good morning from the Valley — the fields are talking, the rivers are moving, and we've got stories from five communities that matter.
Everyone's talking about El Niño weather patterns again, and honestly, out here in the Valley, it’s not just a chat over coffee – it’s a knot in your stomach. With Environment Canada issuing rainfall warnings and upgrading the Fraser Valley to a flood watch just this week, the memory of 2021 isn't far from anyone's mind. Those atmospheric rivers that dump inches of rain, the snowmelt coming down from the mountains, the Sumas Prairie still rebuilding, farm by farm. We saw record temperatures broken in Osoyoos, sure, but down here, that just means more runoff into our already swollen rivers like the Vedder. It's not just about the numbers; it’s about the berry fields, the dairy operations, the livelihoods that depend on predictable weather, and the anxiety that comes with every dark cloud rolling over Mount Baker.
When you're dealing with El Niño weather, it's not some abstract climate report; it’s personal. It’s the farmers checking the dykes along the Fraser, it’s the families in Yarrow wondering if their properties are safe, it’s the Sikh berry farmers in South Abbotsford making sure their irrigation ditches are clear. The Fraser Valley feeds Metro Vancouver, and Metro Vancouver doesn't even know our names. But when the atmospheric rivers hit, suddenly everyone remembers us. This isn't just a weather trend; it's a reminder of how fragile everything is when the land and the rivers decide to talk back. We need to be investing in real flood protection, not just hoping for the best.
That’s my take from the Valley. The crew on the Morning Wire dives into this every day — you can catch them live at mornings.live.