Plus two at the one station south of town at 5 am. Oh memories of 2002.
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Quite an interesting week weather wise. Last weekend we were haying and the temperatures were between 28-31. Finished baling Monday evening. Tuesday was cloudy, a little cooler, a thunderstorm came through the area and depending on which cloud you were under received anywhere from .5 inch all the way to just over 2 inches. If you went 15 miles south they got about 2/10. Yesterday it was cloudy, drizzly, got up to maybe 12. Interesting weather. The IPCC has upped the rhetoric from Climate emergency to climate boiling. I guess nobody was getting excited enough anymore!
Anyway driving around looking at crops is quite interesting. The formerly black hilltops have filled in. In the wheat fields it is a mixture of wheat and canola. In canola all the hilltops are in bloom, amazing how the later germinating canola catches up. In the wheat fields the low areas are ripening and the hilltops are green, ass backwards to normal. Earliest seeded canola is done flowering like Saskfarmer’s picture up top. Wheat has certainly improved, but harvest date certainly a ways off with all the new tillers and regrowth, will need a long fall. Barley certainly looks good. Pea crops look good, finished flowering. Not much for peas in this area as I said before.
Pastures certainly helped by the rain. I got some grasshopper spraying done. Used Coragen at 80 acres per jug. Certainly makes a difference. Working at getting ready for silage now. Enjoy the week.
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Originally posted by Hamloc View PostQuite an interesting week weather wise. Last weekend we were haying and the temperatures were between 28-31. Finished baling Monday evening. Tuesday was cloudy, a little cooler, a thunderstorm came through the area and depending on which cloud you were under received anywhere from .5 inch all the way to just over 2 inches. If you went 15 miles south they got about 2/10. Yesterday it was cloudy, drizzly, got up to maybe 12. Interesting weather. The IPCC has upped the rhetoric from Climate emergency to climate boiling. I guess nobody was getting excited enough anymore!
Anyway driving around looking at crops is quite interesting. The formerly black hilltops have filled in. In the wheat fields it is a mixture of wheat and canola. In canola all the hilltops are in bloom, amazing how the later germinating canola catches up. In the wheat fields the low areas are ripening and the hilltops are green, ass backwards to normal. Earliest seeded canola is done flowering like Saskfarmer’s picture up top. Wheat has certainly improved, but harvest date certainly a ways off with all the new tillers and regrowth, will need a long fall. Barley certainly looks good. Pea crops look good, finished flowering. Not much for peas in this area as I said before.
Pastures certainly helped by the rain. I got some grasshopper spraying done. Used Coragen at 80 acres per jug. Certainly makes a difference. Working at getting ready for silage now. Enjoy the week.
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You in a very lucky area to have been able to recover Tom ðŸ‘
Our Hailed out canola tried to recover , looked very decent by mid July but it got burnt out like all the other canola here last weekend.
It had a chance and was regrowing very fast , but it simply ran out of gas and the three days of 30c and 40-50k winds took it out last weekend.
Much the same for everyone here that got hit on June 25 th .
The irony is , now we got a few rains , nothing significant but I guess it may help fill whatever May be there .
First seeded Wheat will be ready for the swather or pre harvest here within a week .
Wish I had a 50 ft swather this year. Cereals are very uneven.
Will leave most as long as possible to squeeze out as much yield as possible from the low areas.
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Originally posted by furrowtickler View PostThe irony is , now we got a few rains ,
I see some durum turning prematurely here now. Even some of the canola out of bloom for a week now you can see some brownish tinge in color out there.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostWe were visiting your neighbors on Sunday. I was amazed at how green it was, and how good the crops and pastures looked, especially after the desperate start. Turns out you've had considerably more rain than my area, and that is rare. How big is the area? I know it got worse in a hurry going south and east from there.
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Originally posted by Hamloc View PostRealistically the area isn’t that large. It would be from where you were east roughly 8 miles to the red deer river and maybe 5-6 miles wide from north to south. As you get about 8-10 miles south of me rainfall amounts certainly do decrease. As I have said before the Big Valley, Rumsey, Byemore areas are very dry. They have received rainfall recently but are still very dry. I get lots of parts in Stettler, crops out that way certainly have improved a great deal, as have the crops on the way to Red Deer. What were your thoughts on the crops on the way out to our area?
Between your area and red deer, it almost looked like excess rain had done more permanent damage than the earlier dry head. Lots of drown outs. Whereas the hilltops that were too dry had since filled in to make two separate crops.
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Just came back from trip halkirk consort south to foremost to pincher creek and back to Halkirk. I know we are the best of all that area on dryland and ours is below average.Lots of area sub 10bushel an acre,grasshopper galore on hwy 41. Combine were running south of hwy 1 mostly pulses I think.
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