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    #11
    What I find ironic is how one of the best perceived weather forecasting service is kinda out of touch with the reality of how long it takes for conditions to dry to the point harvest can resume.

    In some past commentary from them, they talk about accumulations not amounting to much and that harvest can resume between precipitation events... really? Do these guys know or understand what kind of weather and time is required to dry soaked swaths or even get onto fields that are being straight cut when the mornings are soaking wet and daytime heat and hours are both in extemely short supply in late October. My goodness...

    Let's hope we get a week of decent(for this time of year) temperatures and a spell of LOW humidity at the same time! Low humidity is probably wishful thinking with the conditions out there know.

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      #12
      One thing I never mentioned much before, is the impossibilty to even move grain due to soaked yards, etc. I have a July wheat contract that they have been willing to take since then, but it has been impossible to haul to them due to mud.

      Had canola and wheat booked to go this week, same thing. No way to haul it out. So the financial pressure mounts on that front as well.

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        #13
        Delivering corn down in Watrous. Mud hole city. Went by 8 quarters of standing/swathed wheat combines sitting in field

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          #14
          Corn???????

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            #15
            Ya. Brought it back from Altona.

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