Some Sask. farmers' crops 'looking grim' from dry conditions while others blessed with rain
CBC
Saskatchewan's weekly crop report lays out a picture of moist fields in some areas of the province and worryingly dry ground in others.
"She's looking pretty grim here right now," Ian McCreary, a grain and livestock producer with 3,200 acres of land, said of his crops near Bladworth, Sask., about 90 kilometres southeast of Saskatoon.
The weekly report released Thursday, for June 13 to 19, said rain varied from half a millimetre in Consul, Sask., in the province's southwestern corner to 65 mm in Ituna, in the province's southeast region, located about 110 kilometres northeast of Regina.
McCreary said farmers on the west side of Bladworth are missing the rain that is keeping other crops well-fed.
As they are now, it's too early to tell if his crops compare to the drought two years ago which, at the time, was considered the worst drought in decades — but without rain, he said it will be a stark reminder of that crop.
If he can get rain, it could provide the rebound he needs for an adequate harvest.
"Oh, we're concerned, no question. Even with good rain, we won't have an above average crop," he said. "If it doesn't rain pretty quick, it's going to be rough."
Some crops outlined in the report are advancing faster than normal because of the province's hot spring, including McCreary's.
Both McCreary and Brett Halstead, a farmer near Nokomis, Sask., and chair of Sask Wheat Development Commission, are seeing some grasshopper activity in their crops but nothing disastrous yet, they say.
The crop report says there are concerns among producers about grasshopper and gopher pressures on the land.
Halstead said his crops are receiving an adequate amount of rain. As far as grasshoppers, he's seeing some pressures on field edges and is in the midst of determining whether he'll be spraying fungicide soon.
He's hearing other farmers are facing a range of activity from very wet to very dry and areas with fewer grasshoppers to others with a lot.
"Even within smaller areas of the province, it's various crop conditions even within a few miles of each other," he said.
Some areas in the southern parts of the Prairie provinces, including Saskatchewan, are experiencing an infestation among the worst in years, according to Meghan Vankosky, a research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and co-chair of the Prairie Pest Monitoring Network.