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2002

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  • Klause
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2010
    • 3644

    2002

    Wasn't that the year that everything froze to a crisp?


    Wasn't here yet then... Can't remember.
  • SASKFARMER3
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2006
    • 14485

    #2
    Yes August 4 th it froze from 10 pm till 9 am shit stunk of plant death the next day I was at green water

    Comment

    • oldjim
      Senior Member
      • Oct 2009
      • 248

      #3
      2004 here, August 20th. 53-pound durum. Late wheat field had a beautiful stand, nothing in it. Same for flax.
      Last edited by oldjim; Apr 6, 2018, 00:05.

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      • farmboy44
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2017
        • 198

        #4
        Originally posted by Klause View Post
        Wasn't that the year that everything froze to a crisp?


        Wasn't here yet then... Can't remember.
        was 2004

        Comment

        • Sheepwheat
          Senior Member
          • Jun 2017
          • 3137

          #5
          Originally posted by Klause View Post
          Wasn't that the year that everything froze to a crisp?


          Wasn't here yet then... Can't remember.
          2004. Aug 19. Barely froze in terms of temp. I had zero bushel flax, 45 bus canola, and 50 “bushel” wheat, that weighed 47 lbs, all within a mile. Canola saved me that year. Canola fields were surrounded by bush. That was the only difference, and is part of the reason I leave it standing after seeing the results of the open land that year.

          2002 and 2003 were awesome years, nice and dry, and an easy, early harvest. Even did some wheat in August that year.
          Last edited by Sheepwheat; Apr 5, 2018, 15:15.

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          • Sheepwheat
            Senior Member
            • Jun 2017
            • 3137

            #6
            We are overdue, I must say. Not happily.

            Comment

            • blackpowder
              Senior Member
              • Feb 2010
              • 9247

              #7
              2002 was the year we did very little combining, if any, here.

              Comment

              • Klause
                Senior Member
                • Sep 2010
                • 3644

                #8
                Thnx.


                Worried with a short seeding window and a late start... As some have said. We may be in for an early frost. Thinking canola and barley and some peas are best bet?

                Comment

                • Sheepwheat
                  Senior Member
                  • Jun 2017
                  • 3137

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Klause View Post
                  Thnx.


                  Worried with a short seeding window and a late start... As some have said. We may be in for an early frost. Thinking canola and barley and some peas are best bet?
                  1996. Started seeding on May 27th. Finished June 13th. Harvested mostly in October. Good crop though, no frost damage that year. Even had cps wheat I seeded on June 2.

                  Anything can happen in this country, my friend...

                  Have seeded in June probably more times than not. Earliest start for me has been May 7. Have rarely suffered fall frost. Most of my land is fifty to a hundred feet higher than to the west tho, we are up on a kind of plateau, so that helps too for frost.

                  Comment

                  • Hopalong
                    Senior Member
                    • Apr 2013
                    • 1244

                    #10
                    Have had more than one experience with August frost, one every ten years or so, agree we are overdue.
                    2004 one we had some canola swathed, little damage, started swathing wheat next morning and also remember frozen smell. Able to bale some of worst for feed, rest low bushel weight, all harvested.
                    Carried over some frozen crop into next crop year, able to mix it off.
                    Think worst frozen crop and land depended more on topography than bush shelter.
                    Recently broken land seemed to freeze worse than older stuff, either bush or prairie.
                    Early settlement days some farmers would put just oats or barley in certain areas known to be more prone to August frost.
                    Sask land assessors often did not know more frost prone land, led to Land Bank paying too much for some land when it existed.

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