Nw central Ohio was about done on soybeans, till we started getting this recent rain. We were above normal temperature and mild to severe drought. Till 2 weeks ago. I figure we are 3weeks behind going off of how early they were planted. Beans are uneven but now filling in. I saw the first blooms today. This field would of been planted Friday before memorial day. Corns all over tasseling to below knee high on the strip tilled crap fields. The areas that were flooded out earlier this spring in probably mid calf high. Srw wheat was off about 20%
@@marboray our stuff is all in, but i watch my travel corridors. there is some poor stuff and really good stuff. the only good thing i see, is the prolonged harvest, will slow the rush into the elevators. get some early plants out ,then go to later. i think more of the bins are empty than usda wants to admit. alot of corn was moved late winter , too early to plant time line.
Lots of really late crop in the Canadian prairies. Pockets of excessively wet and pockets of excessively dry. Overall crop is 10 days to 3 weeks behind. Early frost would be devastating
Early frost is becoming less and less of a worry. Just from my observations in my S Ohio garden, the shorter days curtail productivity before cooler temps.
Thanks for the comment on conditions in your area. During the poscast, I was actually referring to the flooded areas in the Northwestern Corn Belt that got planted a month late.
@@marboray Normally the ear might be filling out in late July but if instead it’s late August the days are shorter and it might not have the solar energy to make as big of an ear. That’s what I see if I plant sweet corn that matures in mid September.
Nw central Ohio was about done on soybeans, till we started getting this recent rain. We were above normal temperature and mild to severe drought. Till 2 weeks ago. I figure we are 3weeks behind going off of how early they were planted. Beans are uneven but now filling in. I saw the first blooms today. This field would of been planted Friday before memorial day. Corns all over tasseling to below knee high on the strip tilled crap fields. The areas that were flooded out earlier this spring in probably mid calf high. Srw wheat was off about 20%
@@sandsock Thanks so much for the update! I hope everything can finish for you this year.
@@marboray our stuff is all in, but i watch my travel corridors. there is some poor stuff and really good stuff. the only good thing i see, is the prolonged harvest, will slow the rush into the elevators. get some early plants out ,then go to later. i think more of the bins are empty than usda wants to admit. alot of corn was moved late winter , too early to plant time line.
@@sandsock Great info. Thanks!
Lots of really late crop in the Canadian prairies. Pockets of excessively wet and pockets of excessively dry. Overall crop is 10 days to 3 weeks behind. Early frost would be devastating
Early frost is becoming less and less of a worry. Just from my observations in my S Ohio garden, the shorter days curtail productivity before cooler temps.
Thanks for the comment on conditions in your area. During the poscast, I was actually referring to the flooded areas in the Northwestern Corn Belt that got planted a month late.
@@marboray Normally the ear might be filling out in late July but if instead it’s late August the days are shorter and it might not have the solar energy to make as big of an ear. That’s what I see if I plant sweet corn that matures in mid September.
Central mn has the worst edible bean crop I've ever seen. Corn is yellow and giving up in a lot of places.
@EricCarlson-bz2pt Wow! Sorry to hear that, but thanks so much for sharing your story. You guys have had a really rough year up there.