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Friday Crop Report on a Thursday!

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    #11
    Finished spraying. One benefit of being a small farmer.
    Wheat looks OK. Some drowned and low spots still have water.should yield average for our farm.
    Canola looks OK from the road.but from sprayer there is lots of zero.thin patches.yellow leaves from to much water.
    2 fields will be poor just hard dirt that cannot absorb large amounts of rain . Yield there will be poor already..
    Some neighbors crops look poor from the road..so they must really be ugly up close.
    No prize for a yr..but started out to wet so what can we expect?
    Hope for high prices to compensate.

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      #12
      Originally posted by SASKFARMER3 View Post
      [ATTACH]1573[/ATTACH]

      I just thought this is funny and don't want to hurt any ones feelings at all its meant as humor. So to all those who are easily offended i apologize.
      Sask3 sure nice to see you have your mind on something other than those hated NDs

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by bigzee View Post
        3 tenths of rain all spring, and wind 27 out of the last 30 days sums up what's happening here.
        Heard of early durum heading at less than a ft tall.
        I feel your pain, nothing grows without rain. Dry land farmers are always one rain and one degree away from a nice crop. If it hadn't rained when it did our soil would have been in the neighbouring RM. Even with 2 inches of rain, crops are stunted, gardens too-weeds don't even look vigorous. (Too dry for too long and way too much wind.) It's trying to pull the plants out of the ground.

        Pulse crops still doing ok in your neck of the woods?

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          #14
          Originally posted by sumdumguy View Post
          I feel your pain, nothing grows without rain. Dry land farmers are always one rain and one degree away from a nice crop. If it hadn't rained when it did our soil would have been in the neighbouring RM. Even with 2 inches of rain, crops are stunted, gardens too-weeds don't even look vigorous. (Too dry for too long and way too much wind.) It's trying to pull the plants out of the ground.

          Pulse crops still doing ok in your neck of the woods?
          Peas and lentils short!! Peas not vining.
          One neighbour who seeded peas early are just flowering and are beer can and a half in height.

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            #15
            crops look real good other than being late. not perfect , but pretty happy with what we were dealt here in the last 12 months .1.3" here since last Friday . it's going to have to. quit now , or we will be in trouble again . a 2" rain would kill us . very few finished here , most have a quarter or two . still seeing some crop to harvest . was hauling wheat on Monday . north of tisdale sure is wet , worse than us I think . seeing lots of yellowing in wheel tracks and runs , just too much f$&King water . about half done spraying . worked land prior to seeding looks better , maybe all our ruts will pay off, lol

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              #16
              SF3 , that's definetely the highlight of this shitty , rainy day , lol

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                #17
                Thought you guys always say,,, it the farmer that gettin' bent over?

                Bent over is one thing,,,but really,,, shouldn't they bend over backwards for our business?

                A little hypermobility to accommodate the modern farmer!

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by SASKFARMER3 View Post
                  [ATTACH]1573[/ATTACH]

                  I just thought this is funny and don't want to hurt any ones feelings at all its meant as humor. So to all those who are easily offended i apologize.
                  Unfortunately the picture is out of focus, can hardly even see the flowers due to the object in the center, but I suspect those are not canola flowers. In the interest of science, I performed some research to look into the image closer, tough job, but someone had to do it. I searched the original image on google and those look more like the tall buttercup we have in all the low pastures around here and is considered an invasive species. You may want to consider a different agronomist who can at least identify a canola plant, and get the focus on your camera fixed.

                  Although I will admit, she( I hope it is a she, other wise, joke is on us...) does understand a lot about marketing, and knowledge about agronomy is probably not necessary for a successful business given those other assets.
                  Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Jun 22, 2017, 19:14.

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                    #19
                    Cereals big winners here, lush green ,should start seeing flags in about 10 days. Canola has two distinct growth stages, will be tough to time cutting, lots will be straight cut. Canola bolted early due to earlier dryness, will have an impact on yield. Beans look good, starting to fix nitrogen and green up, but will need heat to get them going. Corn looking a bit sick, too cold. Last year on july corn was knee high, wont be there this year. Need more co2 to warm us up.

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                      #20
                      My area is quite irrelevant. Wheat looks very good, except where it drowned out. Early barley on dry ground looks excellent. Mine on wet ground is very patchy. Canola is extremely late, patchy and uneven thanks mostly to extreme flea beetle pressure. they are still destroying any smaller plants that were trying to recover from the first round. I had some emergence issues on worked ground, seeded slightly deep since the seedbed was mostly lumps of concrete, then it rained the usual 2 inches all at once and sealed right up. Direct seeded all looks good except for the flea beetle damage and drown outs. Took a drive last week, drown outs and standing water all over the country. Lots of crop still out, just seeded around.

                      Pastures look excellent, must be making up for lost time after not growing for the past two springs due to no rain. Hay is ahead of where it should be, and all over the map.

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