
You can clearly see the devestation that was caused by this storm in the pictures. You can clearly see why Gov. Brian Schweitzer declared Glasgow a disaster area. It was pretty nasty.
I've had hail come through and wipe out crops and grass before. Maybe not on the scale we see in these pictures, but it's happened. Depressing is the nicest term I can use for it. How else is a person supposed to react? The weather is something a human has no control over and to lose your crops to the weather for me is depressing. It's hard to get mad about it because who do you get mad at? God, Mother Nature? It does no good to be mad at them, they don't notice. You can get mad at the insurance companies for not paying, the government for not declaring it a disaster to your satisfaction, your spouse for just being there, but God/Mather Nature, they don't care.
The devastation such disaster brings upon a farm or ranch is hard to describe. I feel for these people having been there and done it and bought the t shirt as My Darling Wife says so I can say "I know how they feel." I guarantee you they feel like hell.
I was still looking for a panacea, for some kind of relief from all of that life, from all that damage. Tatum O'Neal












Good news is the alfalfa is coming back, so there will be a cutting in a few weeks-and the pastures didn't get hit, so look beautiful- bad news is that I don't have that much alfalfa hayland, as most is grass, which I don't think will come back to make a cutting- but will provide some good fall/winter pasture- if the snow don't fly too early..... March/April hopefully!!
Temp turned hot now- 96 today.. Good haying weather, but drying things out fast- and no irrigation water available because the rains and flooding washed out the main irrigation canal in several places..
Thanks for the satellite pics Sarpy-- I hadn't seen those....
Hope everything works out for you.