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Hundreds turn out for Innovative Drainage Field Day in Ontario

June 19, 2019  By Drainage Contractor


Ontario cabinet ministers attend the Drainage Innovation Field Day at Huronview.

On Saturday, June 15, 2019, 350 people came out to the Innovative Drainage Field Day at the Huronview Demonstration Farm near Clinton, ON to see four tile contractors install innovative drainage tile.

Hundreds of visitors, from farmers and drainage contractors to members of the public attended the Drainage Innovation Field Day. Event organizers noted that visitors came from across southwestern Ontario and other provinces. Some visitors even came from the United States, and as far as California, to take part in the day.

Notable attendees included Ernie Hardeman, Ontario’s minister of agriculture, Lisa Thompson, Huron-Bruce MPP, and Ben Lobb, Huron-Bruce MP, alongside county and municipal representatives and other dignitaries from agricultural, drainage and conservation organizations.

The drainage demonstration day included field tours, workshops, soil and water education activities and an industry trade show.

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The event was run by Huron County Soil and Crop Improvement Association (HSCIA), a volunteer board of farmers who are passionate about improving soil and water quality. HSCIA has a fifteen-year agreement with the County of Huron to farm on the 47-acre Huronview Demo Farm field with cover crops, no-till, and best practices.

“We knew we needed to invest in field drainage there in order to control erosion and we took this opportunity to try the most innovative system out there,” said Doug Walker, president of HSCIA. “By partnering with Ausable Bayfield Conservation Authority (ABCA), we’re able to use it for research.”

Organizers of the Drainage Innovation Field Day thanked the hundreds of people who attended as well as all the funding partners and other partners in the project and the volunteers who organized and ran the day.

“It is an unprecedented partnership,” said Melisa Luymes, project coordinator. “We brought agricultural, drainage, and environmental stakeholders together to align on innovation and research to improve soil and water quality,” she said.

This is the first time in Ontario that controlled drainage has been installed on a slope, according to Luymes. An Illinois-based drainage design company, AGREM, made the plans for the site and the designers, Jeremy and Bob Meiners, worked with the contractors last week and presented their work to the crowd last Saturday.

Drainage is essential for farming, but it needs to be designed well to reduce the potential for impacts downstream, according to Luymes. “Essentially, we’re trying to ‘shut off’ drainage systems with underground control gates at certain times of the year,” she said. “It works on flat fields in Ontario, but the key to making it work on a slope is that lateral tiles need to be installed on contour at a very precise grade. Conventional tile lines usually run straight, but these curve around the field. It is quite a sight.”

The demonstration farm site features a side-by-side-by-side plot of contoured/controlled drainage, conventional drainage, and an area that remains undrained. Water quality and quantity will be measured, along with yield and soil data. The site also features a research plot comparing 15-foot and 30-foot tile spacing and a demonstration of surface drainage with terraces and a grassed waterway.

The workshops at the drainage demo day featured speakers including Kirsten Grant (University of Waterloo); Sid Vander Veen (Land Improvement Contractors of Ontario); Lynne Warriner and McKenzie Smith (Fertilizer Canada); and Dr. Jeremy Meiners (AGREM). In the soil pit, Anne Verhallen (OMAFRA); Peter Johnson (LICO); and Ross Wilson (ABCA) showed participants how field drainage works and the importance of soil health for water infiltration.

The Huronview Demonstration Farm drainage innovation project was funded and supported by dozens of partners, including the Huron County Clean Water Project, the Land Improvement Contractors of Ontario, Ducks Unlimited Canada, and Ausable Bayfield Conservation Authority. This project was also funded in part through the Canadian Agricultural Partnership, a federal-provincial-territorial initiative. The Agricultural Adaptation Council assists in the delivery of the Partnership in Ontario.


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