Farmers
along the East End of Long Island can be seen
irrigating their fields more often as a result of recent sweltering conditions.
Jonathan
Sujecki and his family have been farming land on the East End for five generations. He says that these drought
conditions are typical for August. He works to keep his crops, vegetables and
nursery plants properly hydrated in these hot conditions by watering the fields
almost non-stop.
“It’s a full-time job
irrigating so a lot of other things start to go on the back burner,” says Sujecki. “You get backed up and there
are only so many things you can do in a day.”
Robert
Nolan, from Deer Run
Farms, says
the recent heat has taken a toll on his vegetables in Brookhaven.
“The yield has gone down,” says Nolan. “When the weather was cool, the yields
were great – 90-95%, now we’re
70-75%.”
Both Nolan
and Sujecki say they do not have adequate supplies of water in wells, but that
water needs to be pumped out of the ground using diesel. They say this causes
costs to irrigate the fields to quickly rise.