Photo: SusanneSchulz/iStock/Getty Images

Cereals withstood storms better: CCHA

Approximately 1,000 crop damage claims made from storms between June 23 and July 1

“Numerous early season storms have resulted in a number of claims for the industry,” CCHA Chairman Scott McQueen of Palliser Insurance said in a statement. “Cereals have generally fared better as many were hit in the grassy stages of development and minimal damage to the plant was caused with environmental conditions being favourable so that crops that were hit by hail are able to recover.”


A hailstone collected by Western University’s Northern Hail Project had a maximum diameter of 12.3 centimetres, which is slightly larger than a standard DVD disc. It was found near Markerville, Alta., and weighed 292.71 grams, breaking a nearly 50-year-old record of 290 grams set in 1973.

Climate change-severe weather link being studied

Western University launches five-year initiative to study hail and climate

Glacier FarmMedia – The discovery by scientists of a record-breaking hailstone in Alberta this summer is part of an initiative to better understand severe weather in Canada during an era of climate […] Read more