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Manitoba Seeding Essentially Wrapped Up

Manitoba seeding is finishing up for the year, following mostly dry weather this past week. 

Tuesday’s crop report estimated overall seeding in the province at 95% complete, up 10 points from a week earlier and ahead of 83% last year and 85% for the five-year average. 

The Eastern region saw variable amounts of precipitation this past week, but all other regions received only trace amounts, if any at all, the report said. The lack of recent precipitation has resulted in the East, Interlake, and large parts of the Northwest having accumulations under 60% of normal since May 1. In contrast, accumulations in the Southwest and parts of the Central region are up to 140% of the 30-year average since May 1. 

Spring wheat seeding complete, with earliest seeded fields at the 4 to 5 leaf stage with tillering underway. Oats and barley are sitting at 97% seeded across the province, and earlier seeded fields are at the 2 to 3 leaf stage. Grain and silage corn seeding is complete, with most fields at V1 to V2. 

Canola seeding is 90% complete across the province, and emerged crops range from cotyledon to 5-leaf stage.  Flax is approximately 75% seeded, and sunflowers are at 98% seeded. 

Soybeans are 93% seeded across the province, with dry beans at 90% seeded. 

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Welcome to the conclusion of the Getting Through Drought series, where we look at the best management practices cow-calf producers in Alberta can use to build up their resiliency against drought.

Our hope is that the series can help with the mental health issues the agriculture sector is grappling with right now. Farming and ranching are stressful businesses, but that’s brought to a whole new level when drought hits. By equipping cow-calf producers with information and words of advice from colleagues and peers in the sector on the best ways to get through a drought, things might not be as stressful in the next drought. Things might not look so bleak either.

In this final episode of the series, we are talking to Ralph Thrall of McIntyre Ranch who shares with us his experience managing grass and cows in a pretty dry part of the province.