A producer article about drop conditions being on track for an average crop. The problem areas are minor and small and will be made up for by the good areas. Then they added this:
There are patches of dry areas around Rosetown, Sask., and in pockets of Alberta, such as Red Deer, but nothing significant.
Is there another red deer on the prairies that I'm not aware of? Everything I've seen around Red Deer is still suffering the effects of the excess water for a month. Huge areas drowned out I hardly seen a canola crop that was even average for this time of year. I realize east of Red Deer started out to dry, but as far as I know most areas have had at least enough rain if not excess by now. Definitely calls into question the accuracy of the rest of the article.
There are patches of dry areas around Rosetown, Sask., and in pockets of Alberta, such as Red Deer, but nothing significant.
Is there another red deer on the prairies that I'm not aware of? Everything I've seen around Red Deer is still suffering the effects of the excess water for a month. Huge areas drowned out I hardly seen a canola crop that was even average for this time of year. I realize east of Red Deer started out to dry, but as far as I know most areas have had at least enough rain if not excess by now. Definitely calls into question the accuracy of the rest of the article.
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