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Cool and Wet Spring 2018

Cool and Wet Spring 2018
By Laura Edwards
 
As we traverse our way through this never-ending winter season, warmer weather is on our minds. Spring is slow to come this year, as late season snowstorms continue to impact South Dakota.
 
Current Conditions
 
Indeed, as of April 10, it is the coldest start to April on record for many locations in the state. For the first third of the month, air temperatures were 12 to 20 degrees below average nearly everywhere statewide.
 
Soil Temperatures
 
Soil temperatures are struggling this season. Most of Central and Southern areas are thawed out through the profile, but Northern and Eastern areas still have some frost in the soil profile. As of April 10, frost depth was still two to four feet deep in the Northeast, according to the SD Mesonet (mesonet.sdstate.edu).
 
When considering planting conditions, ideal soil temperatures for corn are above 50 degrees F. Currently, the SD Mesonet is measuring 30 to 48 degrees F at four inch depth. This is about 12 degrees cooler than last year at this time for most locations. As we are entering into the early season for corn planting per the crop insurance rules, we have a little way to go before the soils are ready for corn seeds. For spring wheat germination, ideal soil temperature is around 40 degrees F, so even that crop is slow to get planted this year in many areas.
 
Figure 1. Soil temperature at four inch depth as of April 11, 2018.
 
Last Frost
 
A lot of gardeners are asking when the last frost will occur. It is still too hard to say for sure, as the outlook for the next two weeks (through April 24) continues to show a cool and wet pattern across the state. The active storm track will likely continue during this time. Average last frost ranges from late April to mid-May, moving from east to west across the state.
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