Poor weather slowed down progress for days
By Diego Flammini
Staff Writer
Farms.com
Mother Nature may cooperate with Ontario growers to give them a window to combine their grain.
Field conditions could improve after long stretches of wet weather and cool conditions.
In Middlesex County, for example, temperatures are hovering around 8 C with light showers, the Weather Network says. The next seven days will bring temperatures between 7 and 9 C with chances of precipitation ranging from 20 per cent to 70 per cent.
Growers aren’t wasting any time using the good weather to their advantage.
“I just finished soybean harvest and will be starting corn soon,” Ann Lamont, a cash crop producer from Middlesex County, told Farms.com. “The weather hasn’t been too kind to us lately, so we’ve got to do as much as we can.”
Lamont is happy with how her beans looked during harvest. She estimates her yield is somewhere “in the mid-60s” bushels per acre.
Farmers in Kawartha Lakes are also making use of favourable harvest conditions.
“We finished soybean harvest a few days ago,” Ed Lewis told Farms.com. “We don’t have all the paperwork in yet, but I would guess we harvested about 40 bushels per acre.
“The weather always plays a factor because you never know what you’re going to get. I think we would’ve liked to see larger yields but sometimes that’s out of your control.”
The temperature in Kawartha Lakes is around 6 C, the Weather Network says. Temperatures will range between 4 and 6 C for the next week.
Growers are happy to see the change in weather.
“We’d be out harvesting for a day, but then we’d get rained out for two or three after that,” Doug Virtue, a cash crop farmer from Bruce County, told Farms.com. “You go through that cycle two or three times and it starts to get very frustrating.”
He has finished about 90 per cent done of his soybean harvest, he said.
Virtue also produces winter wheat, so the recent rains have helped that crop, he added.
“We finished planting the crop at the end of last week, so the moisture was helpful,” he said. “I’ll have to check the field soon to see if any of the crop has emerged.”