By Jazmin Anderson
Michigan is facing one of it's mildest winters since the 1930s, according to the National Weather Service. The rise in temperatures is hitting amidst the growing season of winter wheat, a crop that is planted in the fall and harvested in the spring.
Agriculture experts from Michigan State University Extension told WCMU that winter wheat in its current stage of development needs a soil temperature of 48 degrees Fahrenheit.
Dennis Pennington is a Wheat Systems Specialist for MSU Extension. He said farmers have contacted him with questions about how their crops might be affected by mild temperatures.