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    #51
    Can't seem to find a map for southern Ontario.

    But it would have a lot of brown dots right beside green ones.

    We were fortunate here - the rains came in time to save the corn and beans. But that changes in about a 10 mile radius, then green again. No complete disasters around here, for sure.

    CCAs are seeing some of the biggest potential ever in many fields - pod counts, seed set, cob size.

    But north of us 1/2 hr the corn was 3'-4' tall and tasseling; very short and sparse soy stands.

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      #52
      Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
      This map will indicate yields
      Past 60 days rainfall percentage of average on top of low sub soil reserves...


      Really can’t argue about it ... period .
      I think were the little brown dot in southwest Manitoba.
      Took off the first field of wheat yesterday. For only 5" of rain since seeding, it's yielding pretty good. Bushel weight is 65+, which is a surprise too.

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        #53
        Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
        This map will indicate yields
        Past 60 days rainfall percentage of average on top of low sub soil reserves...


        Really can’t argue about it ... period .

        Due to technical difficulties, not all of our map products under Current Conditions Agroclimate Maps are up-to-date. Generally, the daily products are current to August 2, 2018; archived products are not affected. We will provide a status update on or by August 21. For more information, please contact us.

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          #54
          those maps extrapolate a few data points over too wide of a region. my area shows yellow, but I'm definitely in a brown zone. If analysts are relying on these maps to predict yield, they will be overestimating.


          Also using radar maps to determine accumulated moisture will also result in over stating the amount of beneficial rains this year. Many times the green/dark green on the doppler radar didn't even hit the ground, or if it did the rainfall was less than 5 mm, that had zero benefit to the crop as it evaporated within hours.

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            #55
            Originally posted by MBgrower View Post
            those maps extrapolate a few data points over too wide of a region. my area shows yellow, but I'm definitely in a brown zone. If analysts are relying on these maps to predict yield, they will be overestimating.


            Also using radar maps to determine accumulated moisture will also result in over stating the amount of beneficial rains this year. Many times the green/dark green on the doppler radar didn't even hit the ground, or if it did the rainfall was less than 5 mm, that had zero benefit to the crop as it evaporated within hours.
            That was definitely the case here. But more like much less than 0.5 mm when the green and dark green went over. 5mm would have been extremely helpful...

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              #56
              End of the day that map , in general anlong with low subsoil moisture will tell the tale . There are always micro climates within any moisture, rain fall map .

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                #57
                A good example is starting just 2 miles west has had over 20 mil more rain than here . It does not show up on a map that general but the overall trend is close

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                  #58
                  Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
                  End of the day that map , in general anlong with low subsoil moisture will tell the tale . There are always micro climates within any moisture, rain fall map .
                  The complete lack of subsoil has been the much bigger issue around here this year. Pipeline across neighbors new hay field right now, it is pure powder all the way down. I've never seen this clay that dry. It would normally be one sticky clump the size of the bucket. We have this unknown quantity called dust even.

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                    #59
                    Originally posted by Jay-mo View Post
                    I think were the little brown dot in southwest Manitoba.
                    Took off the first field of wheat yesterday. For only 5" of rain since seeding, it's yielding pretty good. Bushel weight is 65+, which is a surprise too.
                    Some different and bigger brown (yellow) dots on this one Jay-mo. All in the 4-6" range for May 1 to Aug 12 precipitation.

                    Click image for larger version

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                    Link to the original zoomable version here http://www.gov.mb.ca/agriculture/weather/pubs/total-acc-precipitation.pdf http://https://www.gov.mb.ca/agriculture/weather/pubs/total-acc-precipitation.pdf

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                      #60
                      We are located in that light green to dark green circle 200 miles straight south of Saskatoon. Lentils yielding 15 -30 , Durum 30-50 no canola or chickpea done yet. Lentil stubble yielding much better than canola stubble. Thunderstorm lottery playing a big part this year.

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