Thanks to warm and dry conditions across much of the province, Alberta farmers made major headway last week in getting this year’s crop in the ground. As of the latest report, 47% of major crops have been seeded—well ahead of the five-year average of 26% for this time of year.
While some areas in the Central, North East, and North West regions saw seeding temporarily paused by rain late in the week, other regions—especially the South and Peace—continued working with minimal weather-related delays. Seeding progress is ahead of both 5- and 10-year averages in every region of the province.
Crops Emerging Fast
Emergence is also ahead of schedule, with 10% of major crops already poking through. That’s more than triple the five-year average of 3%. Regionally, the Central Region leads with 19% emergence, followed by the South at 15%. Other regions are seeing slower—but steady—emergence rates as soil warms and moisture conditions improve.
Surface Moisture Holding Steady
Recent rains helped bump up surface soil moisture in key parts of the province, especially in the Central and North East. Overall, 59% of surface soils are rated good-to-excellent—just shy of the historical norm. Central Alberta saw the biggest jump, up 20 percentage points from the week before, while the Peace region saw a notable drop of 11 points.