Farms.com Home   News

Crop report shows southeast lagging behind rest of province due to recent moisture

Producers have been hard at work in the southeast trying to get seeds in the ground even as the ground is still filled with moisture.

Spring seeding normally starts up near the beginning of May, but for many in the southeast, the current conditions mean they may have only started this week.

That puts them far behind other farmers in the province, with the western areas pulling ahead.

Ministry of Agriculture Crop Extension Specialist Mackenzie Hladun says that the average for the entire province is also below normal.

"Producers have made fantastic progress this past week with seeding. So now the province is sitting at 38 per cent completed seating in the province overall, this is up 29 per cent compared to last week. Our 38 per cent completed seeding is a little bit behind the five-year average of 53 per cent, but it's pretty close to our 10-year average of 44 per cent. 

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

No-Till vs Tillage: Why Neighboring Fields Are World Apart

Video: No-Till vs Tillage: Why Neighboring Fields Are World Apart

“No-till means no yield.”

“No-till soils get too hard.”

But here’s the real story — straight from two fields, same soil, same region, totally different outcomes.

Ray Archuleta of Kiss the Ground and Common Ground Film lays it out simply:

Tillage is intrusive.

No-till can compact — but only when it’s missing living roots.

Cover crops are the difference-maker.

In one field:

No-till + covers ? dark soil, aggregates, biology, higher organic matter, fewer weeds.

In the other:

Heavy tillage + no covers ? starving soil, low diversity, more weeds, fragile structure.

The truth about compaction?

Living plants fix it.

Living roots leak carbon, build aggregates, feed microbes, and rebuild structure — something steel never can.

Ready to go deeper into the research behind no-till yields, rotations, and profitability?