May 29, 2018
Areas hit by last year's floods in Japan alarmed by early start of rainy season
Hydrangea, the moisture-loving plant, is beginning to color in various parts of Japan as Japanese are bracing for the upcoming sweaty, hot days in summer.
The start of the rainy season allows farmers to prepare rice paddies for this year's crop by bringing in water from irrigation canals. But those in mountainous areas damaged by floods in northern Kyushu early July last year are concerned about the outlook of weather this summer.
Rehabilitation work at farming areas near flooded rivers and valleys in Asakura, Fukuoka Prefecture, is getting into full swing, but damage near smaller rivers largely remains to be attended.
A rice farmer, in his 70s, saw his rice paddies in a hilly area mostly washed away in a mudslide last year, but he expects to prepare unaffected paddies soon for this year's crop.
Rice growers hit by last year's floods are hoping that rehabilitation work will be finished as soon as possible at the damaged areas, before the start of the full rainy season this year. Farmers, while working on rice planning, may be finding themselves consoled with hydrangea flowers seen here and there around rice field footpaths.
Beautiful... May I share a Haiku (Japanese short poem) in A Haiku for Leonardo da Vinci in https://youtu.be/udvnkgmjuQI
ReplyDelete