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Friday Crop Report on a Thursday!

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    #16
    Guys its a Crop report of your area and what's happening. Some who continue to Criticizing me it is getting a little tired. Those who do have a crop report great that's why its called the Friday crop report on a Thursday.
    Yes farming isn't easy no one said it was just trying to show that its not all Great out there some miss rain some get excess rain some cant seed some are done in record time. Farming if it was easy even Broad ass would have won.

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      #17
      Thanks Ham that's why I like the crop report it should show what's happening in different areas.
      Keep posting.

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        #18
        crops are excellent here in ne sk . best looking canola in years . grain and peas sprayed. once over half of canola . little on the dry side but will never ask for rain , lol. have had about 2.5 " since snow left . most seeding done here about May 20

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          #19
          4 inches in the last 3 weeks.done seeding.going to start spraying.crops look good.Land that had trouble growing grain seeded to grass.grass looks great.mother nature is never wrong.It was me trying to grow the wrong thing on that land.

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            #20
            Originally posted by newguy View Post
            Land that had trouble growing grain seeded to grass.grass looks great.mother nature is never wrong.It was me trying to grow the wrong thing on that land.
            Isn't that the truth!

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              #21
              So you two geniuses think I should what have 5 ft wide strips of grass in water runs and flats that are 5 acres or less seed to grass for cows. Lets look at this 10000 acres put all water runs and flats to grass. 500 acres.
              Great Idea only problem extra time seeding and spraying and watching for drift plus harvesting would actually cost me way more money than what I would get out of a 1 mile water run seeded to grass from bales and actually suck up no excess moisture. Try once in our area not working a field and using chem to control weeds in a old SMF system then try working three times and fall chem ap. Guess which one could be seeded the following year and which one was a huge waste of time.

              Excess water has happened and some of you just cant figure that out. Not normal.

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                #22
                SF3 over the years you have talked about tree and bush removal. Have you notice any change, good or bad after they are gone. Just thinking they would have sucked up lots of water but then again they hold snow. Just wondering.

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                  #23
                  good results. Trees catch snow and a crop takes more moisture out. Just need to get it started. This year we got it in the ground then just as its coming up floods hit again. Tired of excess rain and yes we got hit again last night.

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                    #24
                    SF3, you have mentioned the water table issues a few times recently.
                    Really that is what is doing us in. All the excess rain and poorly timed rain
                    shows up immediately in soggy soil and rising sloughs. Truly amazing
                    and defeating at the same time. Our late fall rains kept sloughs high all winter
                    and wrecked the roads this spring.
                    We have had one rain in excess of one inch this spring and very happy about that.
                    Crops are taking off here with not one hole in a canola leaf on the seeded ground.
                    A few acres mudded in. Never amounts to much. Potential is there for a good one.

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                      #25
                      After the ugly hot dry winds this spring we have relief from the dryness. We are in good shape now and field's water holding capacity is nearing full. Had another .27 inches last night. My biggest concern is the peas and hope the tap turns off for a bit to give them a break.... everything else will be just fine as well without anymore precip for a while.

                      Things are looking good here otherwise but need to get on the sprayer when it drys up again. Early stuff needs to be sprayed.

                      Not that I would say we are extreme wet... but funny how it can go from holy shit it is so dry on top to we have enough for now.

                      WOULDN'T IT BE NICE IF IT DIDN'T MATTER?

                      Too much moisture will be problematic for Durum here...fusarium...more commercial salvage???... and you can spray till you're broke and it won't control it if the pressure is too high. Sclerotinia in lentils and canola and peas... Aphanomyces in peas...uncontrolable.

                      I used to balk at disease spraying but have learned this type of farming has "put out the smorgasbord" and requires a different approach. An approach, that even when practiced" doesn't always provide results.... Ahhh farming, not for the faint of heart or anyone who knows better.,.,.,.,.,

                      Stay safe!

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                        #26
                        Its the Friday before a gorgeous weekend and even more dynamite week. Earliest wheat is almost a foot tall. and greener than green, sprayed, Lentils all sprayed and looking terrific with no signs of disease yet but the damp mornings will likely change that. Everything is picture perfect around Pile of Bones and the province, in general. Except tent caterpillars are cleaning off the poplars all the way to Southey and north of McLean. In the good old days we used t go fishing up north for a week at this time. Enjoy the great week to be alive and don't forget to include your families.

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                          #27
                          Need rain in the NE edge of Sask, getting nothing but little 1/10ths shots. Dust flying 20 min after the rain stops. Got half an inch since the snow melted, thankfully we had a pile of snow. Patchy germination, pasture/hay needs a good soaker.

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                            #28
                            Originally posted by SASKFARMER3 View Post
                            Bin we have adapted to this shit! Just sad to see how excess rain can't stop and give us a break! Sick of mud!
                            SF3, I absolutely sympathize with your plight. We've been far too wet for about the same period of time that you have been. It is heartbreaking, now the opposite extreme last year and this. BUT, you say that you have adapted. I'm curious what that adaptation looks like, and why you are still having trouble with too much water if you have adapted? I would think the adaptation would be subsurface drainage, deep ripping, ridge farming, fababeans, even grass as suggested elsewhere. Every year I do more work to try to rehabilitate those areas, and it seems like the next year the rain is even worse and the efforts weren't enough.

                            I have plenty of grass on land not suitable for crops, for both pasture and hay, and I also farm though lots of areas that I accept will likely drown out, for the same reason you do, it costs less than going around.

                            After receiving a total of about 2.5" all spring, mostly in one event, I wouldn't mind seeing some mud again. Places that have never been dry are completely dry. Pastures finally looking like something, but only put cows out on June 1, and not really confident that I won't be feeding again without some serious precipitation.

                            Crops emerged surprisingly fast and well considering how dry it was and how deep I seeded.

                            I see some April seeded crops in the neighborhood which look fantastic, and others that got froze so many times and sat in dry dirt so long that if it were mine I would start over again. Still just random patches of thin stands. After very few frosts in April and even March, it froze nearly every night in mid to late May

                            It has been enjoyable not getting stuck, not being paranoid about compaction. No ruts. Although the novelty of this dust stuff is wearing off quickly. Pretty bad when driving accross a pasture creates so much dust you can choke on it.

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                              #29
                              Originally posted by newguy View Post
                              .......mother nature is never wrong
                              SF3 is. Frequently. Trees catch snow - a crop takes up water. Think about it from a drought perspective - a dry year is far tougher on grass than it is on cereals - why? because the grass needs more water. Trees and grass use huge amounts of water, cereals a lot less plus they are only growing for 3 or 4 months a year. Trees, grass and weeds grow from early spring to late fall. Clear the trees and the grass, seed shallow rooted crops that don't use much water. Kill everything else with chemical outside the 100 days of a grain crop - and you wonder why your land is too wet? Always somebody to blame for excess water but you aren't helping yourself by the way you farm.

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                                #30
                                1/2 inch last night! Showers firing up right now. Tell me again grass how it's my fault! Enlighten me with your wisdom!

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