So far, not so good for outdoor businesses

HARLEM VALLEY — It’s been a dreary start to summer, to say the least. Over the past month, it seems like more often than not the evening culminates with thunder storms and rain showers of some sort. Sure, rain is good to cool off a hot and humid day, but when it pours with the kind of frequency there’s been this season, it spells bad news for many businesses in the area.

“It’s been horrendous,� said John Kemmerer, owner of Kemmerer Farms and Hunt Country Equine Supply, based in Stanfordville, a company that buys and sells a great deal of hay. Kemmerer said that by the beginning of July, he’s usually made over 7,000 bales of hay. This year, he’s made less than 1,500.

“The hay can’t stay dry,� he explained. “You need a minimum of two days this time of year [to dry it], and it takes a good 24 hours just for the fields to dry out.�

After a significant rain fall the hay may dry, but the grounds remain wet. When the tractor’s tires run over the hay, it’s the same problem all over again.

Hunt Country doesn’t just grow hay, it also imports from as far up as Canada, and the shortagess everywhere are an indication that New Yorkers aren’t the only ones being badgered by sudden downpours.

“There’s some places in Canada where they haven’t even started cutting yet,� Kemmerer said.

Produce is another of Kemmerer Farm’s products, and the excess water isn’t doing them any good either.

“You get more flooding in the vegetable fields, and possibly fungus on the crops,� he said. “If this continues, we’re not going to have a tremendous crop.�

But it’s a variety of businesses (and not just the agricultural ones) that are affected by constant rain.

“The weather affects everybody who has to work outside, but even more so for somebody with something that needs to cure without moisture,� explained Michael Collins, a painting contractor. “It’s been tough, there’s no doubt about it.�

Michael Linck, owner of the landscaping business ML Complete Property Management of Clinton Corners and Millbrook, agrees that the rain has been difficult, but also pointed out what everyone being affected by the wet weather has probably figured out already.

“If it means you work late, you work late,� he said. “It’s definitely difficult, but hey, if you want a paycheck you have to do what you have to do.�

Linck has been in the area for the last 12 years, and said he can’t recall having a June as cold or as wet as this one.

“It’s definitely had an effect on business. The ground is so saturated,� he said. “You can’t grade mud. It changes both the hours you spend working and how you go about doing business.�

The weather showed a little mercy this past weekend for the Fourth of July. There was not a drop in the sky to the relief of many residents, including those with businesses to run and those just looking to enjoy their summer. They’re hoping there are more of those dry days on the horizon. But the weather has been inconsistent  so far and few believe it will change in the upcoming months.

“The scattered showers are so unpredictable,� Kemmerer said. “It’s kind of like rolling the dice, watching the weather forecast.�

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Travel league baseball came to Torrington Thursday, June 26, when the Berkshire Bears Select Team played the Connecticut Moose 18U squad. The Moose won 6-4 in a back-and-forth game. Two players on the Bears play varsity ball at Housatonic Valley Regional High School: shortstop Anthony Foley and first baseman Wes Allyn. Foley went 1-for-3 at bat with an RBI in the game at Fuessenich Park.

 

  Anthony Foley, rising senior at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, went 1-for-3 at bat for the Bears June 26.Photo by Riley Klein 

 
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