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Friday Crop Report on a Thursday!

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    Friday Crop Report on a Thursday!

    Well had a short trip to visit and take in some sights and enjoy time with family and friends and get away. But its always great to come home. This year for once I can say were living the dream on crops and just maybe (its not in the bin yet) might be on way to one of our largest ever. I don't think it will top the largest but it will be close. Its a small area but has done well on all fronts. Min Snow and rain this spring then rain after seeding then break then rain before farm progress show then break then almost to much now but just approaching max for soil moisture right now.
    We will be working all the pea ground as soon as the crop is off for both cleaning up the land leveling ruts and getting a nice growth before winter. So far looks like all the canola ground will also get worked. I think I now get why Manitoba works or bands in fall their land.
    Ok here is this weeks report.
    Two inches plus of rain fell since last Thursday and has flattened some fields and twisted canola in the area. The heat was very welcome sight this week.
    HRS is just starting to turn and we have desiccated so far just one field where we put our grain bags. Their is some Fusarium showing up but looks min compared to other years and not even close to last years problem. If you sprayed you should do well. The heads are filling nice only sad part is my 5603 looks like it has a edge on yield on the Carberry and Cardale. New is better right. They are shorter so maybe harvest ease will help. We are still probably a week away from full blown desiccating of the HRS. One thing we were laughing at the Roundup should kill because the wheat still has lots of Leaf matter to take in chemical. Yield is still looking strong.
    Barley the early fields are just being swathed and look promising. The later have caught up and will only be about a week behind with the heat. The later have maybe just a little more yield than the early as heads are bigger. Perfect scenario is to swath and pick in four days, dry, plump and heavy malt barley. But that's in a perfect world.
    Oats has caught up but looks to be the crop that didn't hit its potential this year in our area. Some fields were hit by seeding timing and missed rains early middle and late. Its way shorter this year time will tell but definitely not my best.
    Soy is still loving the weather first rain and lots last week then heat, growing and podding and growing. Three is number for beans per pod. Still love watching this crop grow.
    Durum has smaller heads but boy are they fat. Will be interesting to see if the Fuzz was held back or prevented or just a small down grade for this years production. Lots in our area produced seed for next year as they see us finally back from the wet years and Durum was always a favorite to grow with awesome yields.
    Corn is stretching and filling time will tell.
    Canola the retarded sister has a awesome looking crop in our area on its way, lots of big bananas (still cant get double pods like Manitoba. What the secret. Did get my tissue tests back and found I give the plant to much N are good on all the other nutrients except Boron. Really have to look more into this or what are others seeing. Lots of fields are tall and last weeks rain and wind did twist a lot up and lodge. Maybe just maybe the Liberty Wins may come to a end this year. Our DuPont looks like it might take it out and maybe a Syngenta variety by town might win the whole big game.
    Flax is not done exceptional also and not sure why but it is decent but not the best.
    Lentils their is none around as most ended that experiment after it started to rain.
    Guys who are cutting hay now have a Wow crop just saying the late dude won this year. Pastures are back to normal and looking real nice.
    So this next week thing will definitely pick up in our area with sprayers flying around and guys swathing and guys starting to harvest the 2015 crop.
    In my travels this summer I have seen that we are definitely finally in a nice year but not very far away their are farmers who didn't have much go right. It has been a rough ride for a lot of guys this year. Drought is hard to take just like excess water. Sad part most fed programs don't work till next year so its Sask Crop insurance and now with the July rains most will just hit their Coverage or will just get enough to cover their premium. Gars I'm thinking in a basket insurance is similar with premium and no check. Farming is one tough occupation where every thing from mother nature to Currency manipulation by every thing you could imagine. Every new invention to make you more money and give you higher yields still depends on one thing rain and good weather from spring till fall. I thought it wouldn't rain like it did year in year out but it did. Drought might last for a few more years California is prime example how once some thing sets in funny how long it can last. Maybe its the year we all get back to reality. Every one in our chain from Grain Companies to suppliers to chem fert and advisors. Weather still determines who wins and who doesn't.
    So as the silly season begins be safe out their and remember what waiting for you at home is way more important than any Fricking Crop. Good luck with Harvest 2015.

    #2
    SF3.... I think your flood ravaged crops.of the last few years will.have my 2015 crops beat by a long shot. This is sickening. Peas done @ 25ish bu/ac. I live in fear of canola swaths blowing away. Wheat on the high ground is pathetic with a massive undergrowth of newly germinated stuff because there hasn't been a substatial enough rain until about 3 weeks ago to make it happen earlier all while the rain being a little to late to benefit this years crop much. Flax, well no prettier than the rest of my crop. Can't wait to be done.

    Comment


      #3
      You did hit one thing on the nose. Second Growth and Weeds. One of the nicer flax fields that was seeded early on my drive out from city is now a mat of Cleavers and wild oats. Canola that maybe wasn't sprayed a second time is full of every weed imaginable. Similar wheat that burnt off in June is now regrown and green in places. Canola has flowers on hill tops and ready to go in hollows. This one is a long way from being in the bin.

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        #4
        Guess all this late moisture and heat is a perfect medium for WEEDS. It's hard to imagine so much weedseed sitting dormant in the soil. Farmaholic, after living through the drought of the 80's,I know exactly how you feel - just going through the motions until the next go round.

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          #5
          Our problem in this area is a humidity problem, and odd, unforcast showers that keep adding to it.

          Crops mature slowly if at all, even if it is hot. It is so bloody wet, hay I cut three days ago hardly shows signs of drying in spite of the heat. Canola just going out of bloom after six weeks of it. And we are not getting anywhere near our highs. We hit 28. We just can not crack 30. I think I would die if we did.

          Like flowers in a vase, stuff just won't die.

          Flax is horrible, weedy and dirty, FULL of cleavers and any other mentionable.

          Barley looks amazing. Canola looks amazing. Wheat looks darn good. Faba beans look real good, but need dry. oats hit and miss.

          I came up from the the cool of basement last night. My glasses fogged up. That is how humid it is. The heat is oppressive with this ridiculous humidity. Hard to work under these conditions. Be careful out there. A couple times yesterday I was overwhelmed, and had to sit down. Seems heat stroke was setting in.

          We need air conditioning.

          And finally, 25 bushels of peas is much better than 900 bushels of expensive seed sitting in the bin with a zero yield cuz you couldn't seed them.

          Thanks for your report SF3.

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            #6
            Freewheat, On Thanksgiving Day I'll be grateful. The rest of the year I reserve the right to bitch and moan, whine and complain. ;-)

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              #7
              With you on that, farma.

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                #8
                Combining irrigated spring wheat. Yields disappointing this year with fields running 80-85 whereas other years make 100.

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                  #9
                  What class of spring wheat, ajl?

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                    #10
                    The yields here are off more than 15-20% in the wheat I'm combining. Probably 40-50% off the highs and those aren't anywhere near 100. "Normal" is different for everyone, right Furrow.

                    Interesting observation today. I previously spoke of a pretty rank undergrowth in the wheat I'm combining today. You can see pretty much exactly where there was enough moisture to germinate things like volunteer flax, canola, millet and who knows what else. Low spots are pretty clean but hill tops and side slopes are pretty brutal with undergrowth. Amazing to realize there had not been a significant enough rain to germinate those seeds on the ridge between the seed rows. Thank goodness the planted seeds were placed on moisture and grew, can't complain about crop establishment it was the lack of rain after that sucked. Do the Chem Companies offer rebates for stuff like that. ;-)

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I should mention no corners were cut in herbicides. Everything was sprayed for the target weeds. Its just some didn't come up in certain areas hence the cleaner low spots where they did germinate and got controlled.

                      PS.... haven't seen a single fusarium head or infected kernel!! Dust and lack of dew---Mother Nature's fungicide.

                      Work smart and safe....and get some sleep.

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                        #12
                        It was irrigated Hard Red Spring.

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                          #13
                          I figured that was the case it was irrigated. But the early dryness and heat did chop 20% or more from yield. We just finished first field of peas and worked it late last night it has three months to sit and take in moisture plus rot.

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                            #14
                            my conventional neighbor's peas were so flat last year thry windrowed the crop with hay rakes.
                            There was some shelling, my view it looked like a reseeded crop uniform across the entire field. My guess the losses would be 4 bu/acre, rakes and combines together.
                            They ran a lemken over the stubble then let it be. The shelled peas germinated and grew for 6 weeks the entire field turned green. The other neighbors that did not see the harvest methods were laughing and criticizing how much the John Deeres threw out. I viewed it as a nitrogen recapture. Why not! They have the best wheat crop around this year. But , hey, its always best to criticize the neighbors. Farmers are very good at that.

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                              #15
                              Cheap cover crop, hobby. Yeah, I have stuff happen on my farm that people who did not actually see happen probably laugh at. Thankfully, so much of my land is not by major roads. You know what happens though: Your highway land or super grid land sucks, and those hidden away pieces are real gems, and no one sees the amazing crops. Just the mistakes. lol

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