Originally posted by makar
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Friday Crop Report on a Thursday.
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Originally posted by makar View PostThey only come uninvited and leave rotting carcasses in the middle of the field.
I have a few first nations "applicators" and they are really respectful, and appreciative of the opportunity. I just need a lot more.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostI would rather have a rotting carcass than another moose tramping through the crop all year.
I have a few first nations "applicators" and they are really respectful, and appreciative of the opportunity. I just need a lot more.Last edited by makar; Jul 11, 2020, 23:47.
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Busy planting a different kind of crop this week.
Lotsa fun in the mud and hills here. The hoe is the only thing that will chew through the mud or reach across to avoid it with the tracks at least. My son was out with us for part of the day and I told him that hopefully he doesn’t have to do much maintenance with this fence........... ever.
The corn on the sand is looking like last year which means it’s late and not going to make cobs. The majority that’s on clay ................ not worthy of pics or discussing hardly.
Gave up spraying fungicide and growth regulator part way through as the barley is heading already and the sprayer is sinking and sliding all over. Crop is starting to go down in spots and not looking forward to harvest........ whenever that is. Haying has yet to start and maybe if the rain can stay away for a week the fields might get rid of the standing water at least. It didn’t rain today so that’s a positive start for a trend......
Has anyone else started making hay yet?
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I feel your pain Makar. Not near that bad here, but worse than I expected, and getting too late to bounce back even if it does ever quit raining every day.
The people who say the high ground will make up for it have never been around here. Once our clay gets saturated, crops drown out on hill sides, and flat areas on hill tops, it runs continuously across high land and kills it too. Ground has just been saturated continuously since snow melt. No till, adding lots of fibre, and lots of landscaping and drainage helps a lot, not much can be done when it rains everyday. Official EC station is up to 60 days consecutive days with precipitation( assuming July 1 was an error, when we had an inch, and they show zero).
Wheat still looks really good here. Shouldn't have planted any canola. It was all seeded either side of a 3 inch rain( and during), one quarter was badly compacted from spring combining on the saturated ground, then it kept on raining. Issues with straw, too wet to spread or flow. Flea beetles, and today I see slugs are busy in places. Crusting, compaction. Places that handled the first few big multi inch rains, have recently given up.
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Originally posted by woodland View PostBusy planting a different kind of crop this week.
Lotsa fun in the mud and hills here. The hoe is the only thing that will chew through the mud or reach across to avoid it with the tracks at least. My son was out with us for part of the day and I told him that hopefully he doesn’t have to do much maintenance with this fence........... ever.
The corn on the sand is looking like last year which means it’s late and not going to make cobs. The majority that’s on clay ................ not worthy of pics or discussing hardly.
Gave up spraying fungicide and growth regulator part way through as the barley is heading already and the sprayer is sinking and sliding all over. Crop is starting to go down in spots and not looking forward to harvest........ whenever that is. Haying has yet to start and maybe if the rain can stay away for a week the fields might get rid of the standing water at least. It didn’t rain today so that’s a positive start for a trend......
Has anyone else started making hay yet?
Lots of barley only 6 inches tall, only a few fields of early wheat starting to head, gonna need a long fall here.
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Originally posted by farmaholic View PostYou don't see canola like that in the Slum of the Ghetto. Especially the variety and herbicide system we're growing.
Sloooooooooow and darker yellow flowers....not the vigorous plants with the vibrant yellow flowers of the other two systems. But I hope to make it up on price on a respectable yield for what it is. Really hard looking at some.of the pics posted and comparing them to our "overall" crop.....but if I look hard enough I'm sure I could find a plant or area that could compete.....until then I'll accept what's here and keep my expectations low.
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Originally posted by caseih View Post[ATTACH]6397[/ATTACH][ATTACH]6398[/ATTACH][ATTACH]6399[/ATTACH]
A few pics from ground zero
Like this all around the farm , lots of 16†white poplar busted off
Apparently winds topped at 150 MPH
Luckily environment canada had warned us to wash our hands
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