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Ah the Blue Canola, Not a good sign, But what aren't the Experts telling us.

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  • biglentil
    Senior Member
    • Jun 2015
    • 3261

    #51
    Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
    Not so much blue plants here as a patchy mess, seems we had an overall better catch last year. Both years were a shitty start but there's something about this one... Buy $500 hail insurance and pray for hail? I'm sure it will turn out kinda ok...I hope

    Plane flying around spraying the local BTO's canola.
    Yep when the sub soil moisture is gone its not so easy to replenish. 9 inches in 9 days filled the sloughs, drown the lentils and turned the gumbo into pavement. Lighter land looks better. 1st Durum is headed out and flowering on the light land.

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    • farmaholic
      Senior Member
      • Sep 2010
      • 17478

      #52
      Ah yes, that damn Slum of the Ghetto light loam soil. Useless shit!

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      • furrowtickler
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2004
        • 21871

        #53
        Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
        Ah yes, that damn Slum of the Ghetto light loam soil. Useless shit!
        Should be great for peas. These gumbo areas now produce zero yield here in peas

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        • sawfly1
          Senior Member
          • Sep 2016
          • 947

          #54
          Took the drive yesterday . It is getting really ugly.
          The lightest land is getting close to toast.
          Golden brown might be good for some things ,but not 8 inch high wheat.1/4-1/3 field looks like that. The rest can not be far behind. Canola across the road same area. Brutal
          Wilt .looked great last week. Bolted stems now almost touching the ground

          Comment

          • farmaholic
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2010
            • 17478

            #55
            Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
            Should be great for peas. These gumbo areas now produce zero yield here in peas
            It's not "fool" proof and it takes a fool to farm it. Enter Farmaholic.

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            • sumdumguy
              Senior Member
              • Mar 2007
              • 11974

              #56
              What killed lentils in Manitoba. Lentils were big in Manitoba in the seventies, long before Saskatchewan (until zero-till.) i think that disease and compaction killed the Cinderella crop. Lentils disappeared from the Manitoba scene. Correct me if I am wrong, Manitoba growers.

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