Crop Yield Up, Crop Quality Down

CANADA - A weather and crop specialist with CWB reports grain yields this year will be slightly above average but crop quality will suffer, writes Bruce Cochrane.
calendar icon 7 October 2014
clock icon 3 minute read

By the end of September approximately 70 per cent of the 2014 prairie harvest was complete, well below the 90 per cent complete at this time last year.

Bruce Burnett, a weather and crop specialist with CWB, says the main concerns now are dealing with the lateness of harvest and some of the damage that some of the rains in late August and early September have caused.

Bruce Burnett-CWB:

The harvest in September basically had been interrupted by some heavy rains.

It started in the last week of August and into the first week in September and that plus the fact that some of the crop was not ready yet certainly caused initial harvest delays.

We had very little of the crop, less than 30 per cent of the crop harvested by the 15 September but with some drier weather since the 15 September we've seen that progress pick up considerably.

The rains again have been the biggest factor.

There were some frosts in the last week in August and certainly in the first week in September in certain regions.

We did see crops affected by that but only the latest crops were hurt in terms of crop quality and, for the most part, we did manage to get most areas mature before the first fall frost.

Mr Burnett says crop quality will be down which will affect the availability of higher quality crops but yields seem to be holding up rather well and we are going to have a year of slightly above average yields across the prairies which is a good result considering the rains we had this past spring.

Charlotte Rowney

© 2000 - 2024 - Global Ag Media. All Rights Reserved | No part of this site may be reproduced without permission.