Northwest crops still drier than rest of the province
More rain in the past week has slowed haying progress, but crops are mostly at their normal stage of development.
Daphne Cruise, regional crops specialist with the Ministry of Agriculture, said hay producers in the northwest were able to take advantage of a relative dry spell, while south of the Battlefords, west-central areas were drenched again.
“There were a few areas, North Battleford in particular, and more toward Biggar that received a heavier dump,” Cruise said. “But most of it stayed in the northeast southeast, central, and southwest parts of the province, and in some cases dropping over three inches and compounding from last week’s event.”
According to the crop report for the week ending July 18, Biggar recorded 56 mm of rain and Landis 36 mm. The ministry expects some crop losses in the region due to excess moisture, a condition reported in 23 per cent of the cropland and 14 per cent of the hay and pasture land. Producers are holding off on cutting more hay until they can bale what’s already been cut, and most of that progress is being squeezed in between storms.
