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I had a eye opener yesterday! I suggest every one take a driv!

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  • SASKFARMER3
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2006
    • 14485

    I had a eye opener yesterday! I suggest every one take a driv!

    Wow it is hard to imagine what's happening out their till you get in the truck and head out crop checking.
    For all spring I said it was a normal year and for us maybe it's just were back to normal. Showers come around long lake then build and drop close to our area , they don't travel across the valley then head east to Manitoba.
    If a storm crosses the valley it picks up swings north for a bit then heads east.
    So yesterday I headed to the lake a different way.
    As I'm going north on a grid from our place I notice just 10 miles out things are dry. Leaf wilting in the sun and wind yesterday. As I cross the highway and keep traveling north reality sets in. Fields turning blue and wheat with no leaves and headed. Winter wheat turning golden and canola a little here and their.
    Who ever rented some of the old broad ass rented land has basically nothing. Now after a hour strait north and turning east the crops do improve but you can tell they need a drink real soon or they will be going backwards.
    At the lake the flowers were drooping and trees look like they need a good rain.
    So normal year no fricking way. I'm thinking sask is for the most part turned from a wet cycle to a very dry one.
    Within the next few weeks I'll be hapeading west to calgary can't expect that trip to be very green.
    Basically it was a eye opener how close the line is from nice to out of moisture.
    Take a drive all it makes you appreciate everything around you oh so much better.
  • riders2010
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2010
    • 2205

    #2
    There are pockets within pockets where crops change drastically within very short distances. That is why you cannot say a certain area is dry or not dry and reflect every field of that area. Showers were very eradic and that make a huge difference. Althouth Kelvington area has had perfect rain all spring bumper crops.

    funny you drive along and every field looks the same for awhile real shitty, then you drive and for awhile crops are better all looking the same more or less. ITS THE WEATHER THAT TELLS 90% of the story.

    Comment

    • SASKFARMER3
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2006
      • 14485

      #3
      Next week were going up to wadena then up to green water then over to Hudson Bay and back down to canora and south.

      Comment

      • furrowtickler
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2004
        • 22069

        #4
        Maybe team up with the assassin - you two would make quite the pair

        Comment

        • Hopalong
          Senior Member
          • Apr 2013
          • 1244

          #5
          Points out the difficulty with getting production forecast right.
          Like some others, early seeded canola is finished bloom and looks only a fair crop at best.
          Cereals still look good, especially HRS wheat and barley.
          Our winter wheat was late seeded and thin but has filled in with later tillers still flowering.
          Do not see much in way of insect or disease problems in our area of east Sask, cereals have potential to make up for reduced canola yield.

          Comment

          • BreadWinner
            Senior Member
            • Jan 2008
            • 1493

            #6
            The good areas are going to need some rain to Finish this crop or they will be just as bad as the poor areas!!! You can't grop a crop on a couple inches of rain. Poor ground is now showing up and the better ground will be soon to follow.

            Comment

            • ado089
              Senior Member
              • Aug 2004
              • 1754

              #7
              There are some canola crops around that look like they have a chance at 45. Personally I'd rather be looking at one that will run 25-30 at least it has a chance at filling. Does anyone remember what the late July rain did in 03. Canola flowered again mid august. What a mess, we made silage, too bad the cows are gone this time around.

              Comment

              • silverback
                Senior Member
                • May 2005
                • 1697

                #8
                So what are these AFSC or Sask insurance guys going to do when the numbers come in from a pocket that got no rain, but guys a few miles away got it when they needed? Like you said Sask3, there are guys in the same county that are going to get 5 bu canola close to a guy with 40.

                Are they sitting in the air conditioning taking it easy right now? Are they going to run the guys with no rain through the ringer because they can't believe there was no rain on a certain farm?

                Anyone know what these gov't agencies are discussing right now? Charlie??

                Comment

                • blackpowder
                  Senior Member
                  • Feb 2010
                  • 9338

                  #9
                  Remember - individual indexes now. In AB anyway. Im sure we have to pass a knife through it hete.

                  Comment

                  • stonepicker
                    Senior Member
                    • Dec 2011
                    • 1217

                    #10
                    Let me guess, now the crop ins. co's are gonna screw us too? Who cares what they're thinking. I've never met a bad crop ins. man yet. Question, if someone doesn't trust anyone, should they also be considered un-trustworthy?

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