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Snow and wheat yields

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    #13
    Originally posted by helmsdale View Post
    Performance here generally relates to water use efficiency.

    Lentils/Chickpeas>Peas>Mustard(has to get established)>CWRS>CWAD>flax>Barley(can look phenomenal at start but usually gets its ass handed to it as there's too much plant mass to support)>Canola

    If there's subsoil moisture, Canola will certainly dig for it so long as it can get established. No matter the variety though Canola might draw past August moisture wise only 1 out of 5 years here. July and August usually scorch it! While straight cutting was a novelty to the more traditional canola growing areas, guys here have straight cut canola virtually since its inception. Only on the wettest of years was there ever enough biomass to swath and roll it into anything, so it was generally thought better to chance shelling out in a wind, than having it all blow away in a wind.

    Canola on at least 3 out of 5 years will not outproduce cereals in the biomass department. 1 out of 5 it might be even, and that 1 out of 5 that the stars get semi inline, it'll choke your combine.

    Typically every drop of rain that falls after about the 15th of August is either consumed by weeds, or held into next year. With no subsoil moisture crops are generally hand to mouth here. There's nothing to go looking for, so you have to use what is in that top 6" as efficiently as possible.
    Excellent post

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      #14
      Tall stubble has more benefits than just snow catch. Keeps the wind off the soil at ground level,less evaporation, better microclimate. Keeps the sun off the soil, lower soil temps ,less evaporation and good for biology.

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        #15
        Originally posted by TASFarms View Post
        Tall stubble has more benefits than just snow catch. Keeps the wind off the soil at ground level,less evaporation, better microclimate. Keeps the sun off the soil, lower soil temps ,less evaporation and good for biology.
        If you have a good enough crop for tall stubble ….. there in lies the issue
        North of hiway 16 , tall stubble can be a curse as well in wet , cold springs

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