Long-awaited summer heatwave hits Sask. farms

Midsummer heat, following months of cold and wet conditions, have put Sask. farms in “overall good condition.”

After a week of clear, sunny July weather, crops all across Saskatchewan are shooting up and blooming in their fields.

“Canola and spring cereals are still the furthest behind the normal stages of development for this time of year.”

Despite “a few isolated storms with heavier rainfall amounts and hail” scattered across the province last week, hitting the Frobisher, Regina, Langenburg and Macklin areas, most areas of the province stayed dry.

Watch: How cropland topsoil moisture conditions have changed in 2024

Conditions are so dry that the Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency (SPSA) flagged “a high risk that covers most of Saskatchewan” and issued a provincial fire ban on Thursday.

However, the weather has also been a big help for farmers’ haying operations, which have been running behind schedule all season. Now, nearly 20 per cent of the hay crop has received its first cut. Thirty per cent of the hay is rated as being in ‘excellent’ condition, while 59 per cent of the hay is ‘good.’

“Over the next week … haying will continue throughout much of the province with the drier conditions forecasted,” the report said.

Crop development: July 8, 2024

Because of all the rain that has hammered Saskatchewan farms so far this season, the main cause of crop damage in many regions of the province remains excess moisture.

Hail, gophers, grasshoppers, aphids and cabbage seedpod weevils also “continue to cause damage,” while producers watch for other stresses, diseases, insects and pests affecting their crops.

“With the frequent moisture and currently humid conditions, disease development has been observed in various crops including pulses and cereals,” the report noted.

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