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Friday crop report on a thursday!

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    #41
    The vegetative maps from space have turned out to be a bust because they cant correlate oilseeds in pods or grain in heads.

    The only yield monitor I calibrate is when it goes in the bin. They arent getting my data for free and then harm my marketing efforts.

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      #42
      Originally posted by jazz View Post
      The vegetative maps from space have turned out to be a bust because they cant correlate oilseeds in pods or grain in heads.

      The only yield monitor I calibrate is when it goes in the bin. They arent getting my data for free and then harm my marketing efforts.
      Except the 48 bpa durum and 40-50 bpa canola you mentioned…. oops….

      Comment


        #43
        Originally posted by Herc View Post
        Except the 48 bpa durum and 40-50 bpa canola you mentioned…. oops….
        Thats just coffee talk, way different than my combine sending it too them along with the acres.

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          #44
          L340 up a minimum of $50 a bag over what I paid last year, this is ****ed.

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            #45
            Originally posted by Goodtime View Post
            L340 up a minimum of $50 a bag over what I paid last year, this is ****ed.
            We planted 5 plots this year. Just swathed them. L345, L343, 2 Pioneer 506 and 516 and a Liberty Link called Croplan, can’t remember the number, but it is cloubroot resistant, it has some degree of shatter resistance and was $80 less a bag than my 345. It swathed good and pod integrity wasn’t as good as 345 but was decent. Looking forward to the results.

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              #46
              Originally posted by wmoebis View Post
              What difference does the grade and protein make they can pay you what ever they want for what ever you have. You just have to agree with them or move on. Like buying and selling anything else. Does the price change with the amount you have for sale because the quality and protein don't?
              I actually had a buyer this yr offer me almost .25c more a bu if I sold them quantity amounts of my #1 cwad vs 1x or 2x loads

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                #47
                Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
                Here the low protein is all coming from low areas, the pieball just rolled in like crazy in nearly every low area and draw
                Even to the west of here where they were blessed with a little more rain and much of the yields could be called good even by SF3 standards the Wheat is piebald and small shrunken kernels.

                No shortage of fertility or any significant disease pressure.

                Another odd thing I have never seen before is tillers with stem about as big as mig welding wire with a big head bent over touching the ground. Too low for the cutter bar but makes it appear to be header loss or sawfly damage in the stubble.
                Last edited by shtferbrains; Sep 9, 2023, 09:36.

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                  #48
                  Originally posted by shtferbrains View Post
                  Even to the west of here where they were blessed with a little more rain and much of the yields could be called good even by SF3 standards the Wheat is piebald and small shrunken kernels.

                  No shortage of fertility or any significant disease pressure.

                  Another odd thing I have never seen before is tillers with stem about as big as mig welding wire with a big head bent over touching the ground. Too low for the cutter bar but makes it appear to be header loss or sawfly damage in the stubble.
                  Ya same here in some fields , field edges and thin areas

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                    #49
                    Combining Esma feed barley. Yielding surprisingly well.

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                      #50
                      It is an unbelievable fall on the prairies. Warm, dry, cool nights and frost-free to this point. The cost-saving of not having to dry grain or move grain around is substantial and appreciated, not to mention the savings in human energy - Thank You God. If we are lucky, it’ll rain for a week in October then the fall will remain this way until Halloween and we can get our fall jobs done. Good Luck those of you who are still fortunate enough to have something to harvest. Safety First everyday.

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