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Jamaica: Flooding destroys banana farm for second time
After three days of torrential rainfall last week, which ravaged Frederica Appleby's farm at Windsor in Portland, she has lost hundreds of fully grown bananas on the verge of harvesting. Marking the second time in six months that flooding has destroyed her farm.
Appleby, who also suffered a heavy loss in April of this year when the Rio Grande washed through every inch of her four and half acres of farmland, is now struggling to come to grips with a second straight loss from a livelihood in which she has invested heavily.
"This is like a nightmare," she told The Sunday Gleaner.
"I am yet to recover from the devastation in April of this year and now I am facing another catastrophe. I was banking heavily on this crop to save the day, but now I don't even know where to turn. I have lost approximately 700 fully grown banana trees, which were ready for harvesting in a month's time, but now all is gone."
Standing on the farm, as far as the eye can see, the flattened banana trees tell it all. Yet, amid the devastation, a sole banana plant, covered with blue plastic, an indication that harvest time was just around the corner, remains standing.
Appleby is not the only farmer affected for the second time in less than a year.
Her neighbour, Vincent Barrett, also lost one acre of the fully grown fruit. Both are now seriously considering whether to undertake the ordeal of replanting or to count their losses and flee their flood-prone properties.
Estimated cost of damage to agriculture produce in the Rio Grande Valley following the recent six days of continuous, heavy rainfall, could run into hundreds of millions of dollars. A team from the Rural Agriculture Development Authority is scheduled to begin assessment of the damage later this week.