Wheat farm families across the United States are sharpening their pencils to figure out how to deal with the on-going challenges of high input costs and low crop prices. Fortunately, 2025 winter wheat crop conditions do not create another concern for many of them following a remarkable turnaround in November.
Writing in Progressive Farmer Dec. 3, meteorologist Bryce Anderson said a boost of rain and snow in November “has given the crop a buffer and then some in anticipation of the post-dormancy development and production phases when spring 2025 rolls around.”
Record Improvement
Anderson shared USDA’s winter wheat “condition index” that suggest a record 35-point improvement from late October to late November (see chart below). Similarly, Kansas wheat rated good to excellent increased by 15 percentage points between Nov. 3 and Nov. 24. That is the largest increase since at least 1987 said Douglas Bounds, Kansas state crop statistician, in the Progressive Farmer article.