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Your Pasquia Golf Course is gone. What now?

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You won't believe what the Carrot River is doing to us

Morning from the junction — here's what's moving in Melfort.

The Carrot River has been a topic of conversation around the co-op coffee counter, and for good reason. It's not just running high; it's practically trying to reclaim the Pasquia Golf Course. We're talking about an "extreme high flow advisory" here, and the damage is already being called "enormous." You might think a little water is fine, but this isn't just a spring melt puddle.

### What This Means for Melfort

This isn't just about a few flooded fairways. The Carrot River is a central part of our agricultural landscape, flowing through some of the richest black loam in the province, right through our trading area that includes places like Star City and Tisdale. When it's this unpredictable, it affects more than just recreation.

* The Pasquia Golf Course, east of town, is submerged, which impacts summer recreation for folks from Melfort and surrounding communities.

* The extreme high flow advisory means peak water levels aren't even expected until this weekend. So, the situation is likely to get worse before it gets better.

* The sheer volume of water points to broader hydrological shifts impacting our region, something that has direct consequences for the fields that feed the country and the rail lines that move it.

When you have residents in Armley Corner being forced to evacuate their farms due to flooding, it hits home. This isn't just some abstract "weather event" from far away; it's happening right here, impacting the very foundations of our community. The productivity of the Carrot River Valley is critical to the economy here, and when that's threatened, it’s a big deal for everyone who calls this junction home.

That’s the morning wire from Melfort.

The team on the morning show dives into these stories every day — catch them live at mornings.live.

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More from Jack Lawson

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →