Well, the above photo probably describes the last seven days of our harvest. We had rain last Thursday then mist on Friday and Fog Saturday till noon or later. Sunday we went tough but did a flat few fields of Wheat. Monday the crew arrived, and we went like a ****d ape. Then the Fire happened at Sundown and the next hour or two kinds of ****ed that up. Tuesday we started early and did get two done, but rain hit at 2. We harvested in mist and snow showers till 4:30 when we finished the fields down south and headed home in a snowstorm. Wednesday we woke up to snow.
What a ****ing harvest.
Were at 30% done as of this morning and we still have a little bit of Snow on swaths and in standing crop. Let's hope this cold blast changes the picture or were at a couple of million-dollar or more loss — Yea what a great job we have as farmers.
Hrs did get down to dry just before the fire. 14.6 and yield are great. But the grade is not in top two let's say. Falling number is good. So who knows. Some fields that missed snow event one are standing nice. Others a mile away are flat. Seed AC BRANDON is harvested. So far all wheat has to be put through the dryer and same with barley. Peas weren't We still have lots of HRS to go and will start on it first as the dryer is cooking every day. AT one point we will switch to swath Canola. Most have all Cereals still out and are slowly picking away one field at a time — North in the 6 in more rain its just ugly.
Flat wheat. Green is the shelled grain from sprayer tracks.
Barley is all harvested in the area. Fields left standing or swath have been abandoned. They are, growing and some in the three-leaf stage. ****ed.
Oats is coming off some exceptional yields in old flats that weren't seeded for years. Others are ok — lots of shelling now.
Flax is getting cleaned up if sprayed or just salvaged to remove and quit having to look at these fields.
Durum is still out in a lot of the area and getting picked at similar to wheat.
Lentils and peas are done or abandoned, or even some are raking and taking whatever they can when the sun comes out.
So what do you do when it snows. Dry the **** out of the soil for next year and Kelly the pea trash into the soil.
Pastures are up to speed and sloughs are filling. Green feed froze badly never got rolled up.
Continued.
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