Drought may be overtaking parts of Alberta and Saskatchewan, but so far at least, Manitoba is avoiding the worst of the dry weather, says a story from Syngenta.
While dry pockets do exist in the province’s southwest, nobody is yet raising alarms.
“We haven’t seen negative effects because of dry weather. We just know that crops could benefit from rain,†said Anne Kirk, of Manitoba Agriculture.
“WE’RE NOT SEEING DAMAGE AS OF YET AND we’re not sure when conditions might become a problemTopsoil moisture conditions continued to deteriorate across Saskatchewan this past week, as mostly dry conditions persisted, according to the latest provincial crop report, says a story from Syngenta.
Across the province, topsoil moisture on cropland was rated as 5% surplus, 49% adequate, 37% short and 9% very short as of Monday. That compares to a week earlier, when crop was rated 6% surplus, 61% adequate, 28% short and 5% very short.
The majority of the province received very little rain this past week, ranging from negligible amounts in most areas to 78 mm in the Nipawin area.
OVERALL, CROPS ARE AT THEIR NORMAL STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT for this time of year. However, the report noted there are some crops that are behind due to moisture issues.
Dry conditions in southern Saskatchewan are cause for vigilance, BUT RAIN COULD STILL PULL OUT A HEALTHY HARVEST, according to Patrick Moolek. The area of concern lies within a triangle shape, with the northern tip at Saskatoon, one arm stretching southeast to Weyburn, Estevan and the U.S. border, and the other stretching southwest to Swift Current, Maple Creek and the U.S. border
Wheat futures fell, shrugging off signs of further deterioration in already stressed crops, on a round of profit-taking following a rally to multi-year highs, traders said. Sept. closes: Minn. dropped 50 3/4 to end at $7.69. Chi. fell 21 to $5.39 and KC lost 23 cents to $5.46 1/2.
Well the next 10 days are make or break for Alberta Saskatchewan and Manitoba. 35 temps and wind don't make for excellent grain growing. Yes a rain today or last week would of helped most to get through this but basically Wind and heat don't make plants happy.
Time will tell if I'm wrong but this weather pattern has been in place since mid winter. Nothing has changed storms go up over and down. No montana lows because its dry dry dry down their.
Its sad to see but really welcome to the 80s this is what we lived and farmed for years.
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