Well to all the haters out their have a great Sunday.
To every one else it just amazes me how some of you just cant get your head around that the last 8 to 10 years were not normal. Some of us were almost wiped off the face of the farming map. But were still told it didn't take place it didn't happen by some.
So now when I say we are finally back again the haters come out and say you will get the same as us.
Maybe not as we are finding.
Frost was min to non existent in our area. Plants are rooting down and water is slowly drying up. We will need some moisture in June to get the crop to the next stage but that's it.
Like the topic its kind of scary considering where we have been. Its tempting to get over excited but we still are one three inch rain away from a disaster again. Yes the longer we go with out rain the better we can take a huge rain event.
June is our wettest month and it arrives tomorrow so all bets are off.
But having a plant root for a change is a good thing. Having crops actually grow around a wet area is something we haven't seen in a long while. Now Seeding to shallow etc its not a time to miss a step.
So yes I feel real bad for all that are experiencing a different season it sucks real bad.
But always remember we live in Western Canada one of the hardest places in the world to grow a crop. Mother nature controls more of your final results than any crop advisor, Seed, chem fert etc.
She holds all the cards.
Time will tell if the new varieties that we are using can adapt to a dryer climate as they were created and bred in the wet years.
Any one can get a crop to germinate if it rains every night. Hell canola grew one year on top of the ground it was so wet then rooted in. Rain that comes normal makes any seeding problems go away.
Simply its about adapting to weather and going with it. Yes I bitched about rain but after 8 to 10 years of the shit you begin to wonder if its all worth it.
So far it looks like it might be out year to pull one off, time will tell but for now its Scary how good the conditions are. Fingers Crossed.
To every one else it just amazes me how some of you just cant get your head around that the last 8 to 10 years were not normal. Some of us were almost wiped off the face of the farming map. But were still told it didn't take place it didn't happen by some.
So now when I say we are finally back again the haters come out and say you will get the same as us.
Maybe not as we are finding.
Frost was min to non existent in our area. Plants are rooting down and water is slowly drying up. We will need some moisture in June to get the crop to the next stage but that's it.
Like the topic its kind of scary considering where we have been. Its tempting to get over excited but we still are one three inch rain away from a disaster again. Yes the longer we go with out rain the better we can take a huge rain event.
June is our wettest month and it arrives tomorrow so all bets are off.
But having a plant root for a change is a good thing. Having crops actually grow around a wet area is something we haven't seen in a long while. Now Seeding to shallow etc its not a time to miss a step.
So yes I feel real bad for all that are experiencing a different season it sucks real bad.
But always remember we live in Western Canada one of the hardest places in the world to grow a crop. Mother nature controls more of your final results than any crop advisor, Seed, chem fert etc.
She holds all the cards.
Time will tell if the new varieties that we are using can adapt to a dryer climate as they were created and bred in the wet years.
Any one can get a crop to germinate if it rains every night. Hell canola grew one year on top of the ground it was so wet then rooted in. Rain that comes normal makes any seeding problems go away.
Simply its about adapting to weather and going with it. Yes I bitched about rain but after 8 to 10 years of the shit you begin to wonder if its all worth it.
So far it looks like it might be out year to pull one off, time will tell but for now its Scary how good the conditions are. Fingers Crossed.
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