British Columbia

Atmospheric river floods fields in B.C.'s Fraser Valley, farmers brace for more rain

A Fraser Valley farmer says his berry fields are flooded after heavy rainfall across much of southwestern B.C., as he and others in the farming community brace for more rain.

Abbotsford farmer says he won't know extent of damage until spring 

Harry Sidhu shows his blueberry fields in B.C.'s Sumas Prairie.
Harry Sidhu says he is waiting to see the extent of the damage to his fields following heavy rainfall on the Sumas Prairie over the weekend. (Michelle Gomez/CBC)

A Fraser Valley farmer says his berry fields are flooded after heavy rainfall across much of southwestern B.C., as he and others in the farming community brace for more rain. 

Harry Sidhu, whose family owns a blueberry farm on the Sumas Prairie, says he is among those nervously watching the skies after an atmospheric river dumped up to 200 millimetres of rain on the South Coast over the weekend, according to the province's River Forecast Centre.

Sidhu says farmers are still recovering from the catastrophic November 2021 floods that destroyed farms on the Sumas Prairie, a low-lying part of the Fraser Valley about 90 kilometres east of Vancouver.

"It's a lot of bad memories, lots of stress, anxiety, and a lot of the other producers feel the same way," Sidhu said Monday.

Atmospheric river to bring heavy rains to B.C.'s South Coast

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A series of atmospheric rivers are expected to hit B.C.’s south coast starting Saturday and lasting through Wednesday next week, prompting flood watches across the region. CBC's Charis Hogg has more.

'Risk of the unknown'

Sidhu says he won't know the extent of the damage to his field until spring. 

"When fields are submerged underwater ... it starts to cause issues with the roots — root rot or cane diseases," he said. "These are things that are going to come up in the latter months. It's just the risk of the unknown." 

Jaswant Dhillon's fields were submerged by more than a half-metre of water on Sunday. He says he just planted new blueberries last year after his crops were destroyed in 2021.

"We're worried about the future," Dhillon said.

Although Abbotsford received a break from the rain on Monday, it is expected to return and persist over the next few days.

"We hope that the impacts are not catastrophic. We are not expecting them to look anything like we saw in 2021," Environment Canada meteorologist Armel Castellan said.

Flood watch in place for Sumas River

The River Forecast Centre issued an upgraded flood warning for the Squamish River and tributaries including the Cheakamus River on Monday, as another torrent of heavy rain was expected across the province's South Coast.

A bulletin at 5:15 p.m. Monday said water levels in the Squamish River were rising, according to a gauge near Brackendale, a neighbourhood north of downtown Squamish, B.C.

The forecast centre has maintained flood watches for the rest of the province's South Coast, spanning all of Vancouver Island, the Sunshine Coast, the North Shore mountains and parts of the Fraser Valley, including the Sumas River.

Lower-level streamflow advisories are in effect for the Central and North coasts.

River levels were expected to peak in most areas on Monday and Tuesday.

Sidhu, meanwhile, said it's stressful to "constantly have this overhang of a flood coming."

"We're still in that recovery mode," he said. "We haven't recovered and to go through this process again — I don't have the words to explain it. It's very difficult."

With files from Michelle Gomez and The Canadian Press