Very dry in east central alberta but we still have time to get some moisture. I am very worried about the pastures they might not even green up.
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The Storm sucked for moisture, had lots of wind, lets do a poll how dry are you?
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Originally posted by WiltonRanch View PostNeighbor and I were talking about zero tillage and guys working stubble with the high speed disks. Funny how oat stubble cut a foot high has moisture compared to worked stuff. They’ll be parked in the fence row with the rodweeder for another 20 years.
I left all mine alone after harvest. Canola will be going in there.
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I would say we are No.2 Dry on top but wet if you go down little.
Must have got 6 inches of snow yesterday and with none of the fields worked the stubble is full again. Not much value in snow at this time of year here because most of the water will just run into the creeks when it melts.
CaseIH I can hardly believe you missed this storm? We were in a whiteout all yesterday afternoon and into the evening.
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Originally posted by bigzee View PostThings can’t be all that bad. Cash rent in that $110-125 range, land selling $500-750k. Machinery sales through the roof, and commodity prices falling like a rollercoaster.
Crush margins well over 100 in every new crop month. Sign 'er up! Profit for everyone!
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#3, I was burying fencelines this fall and have never seen the soil profile so dry, when I hit clay it was like powder and never had trouble with it sticking to the bucket all the way down, my dad has seen this before, he mentioned his last bad year for dry was 1988 where the tap shut off and crops burned to complete shit, but he did have his share of too wet years where nothing got seeded, wishing you didn't bother because half the field was flooded out after seeding. We did get a nice 6 inch shot of snow last week that soaked in before this last storm, this will help for about 2 days when the 60 mph winds start blowing in May. Long story short, I am concerned about what this growing season will bring.
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We had a few inches of wet snow on Sunday night. By Monday morning it had all blown away, must be in S3's yard by now. Winter snow was almost all gone, run off was way below average, but still water everywhere, can already drive around the fields ( carefully) with truck in 2wd. That is not normal.
Locals are definitely getting concerned about the pattern. This type of spring is never good for hay crops, or pastures.
Pattern has been in place since July of last year. Very little rain since then, below normal snow, hardly even used the snowmobiles. Rode until almost May the past few years.
But the daily deluges we had last spring and summer, plus the huge snowmelt last year definitely refilled the reserves.
I would take ideal dry seeding conditions like this is stacking up to be, over mud, cold, and late any day, but I reserve the right to change my position in June if this pattern holds.
Edit, this is west Central Alberta. Coldest Wettest place on prairies.
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Dry and the tank is empty. Couldn’t get a soil probe in the ground last fall. Very concerned about this growing season. Both for crops and pasture/hay land. Same as everywhere, seems guys don’t care and are going hard. Land, land rent and equipment up up and up.
Weather patterns seem to be setting up to miss us. Where is the best place to find some optimism???
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