Kansas Winter Wheat Crop Crippled by Drought that Covers 80% of the State

The drought situation across much of the Plains hasn’t improved this year; instead, the latest U.S. Drought Monitor shows it's growing worse. Now, farmers across a state that typically accounts for 25% of the total winter wheat production in the U.S. are staring at a bleak picture for crop prospects this year.

Doug Keesling farms near Lyons, Kan. He would typically be planting spring crops in April, but because it’s so dry, he’s playing the waiting game and needing a little moisture before he plants.

The latest U.S. Drought Monitor released on Thursday shows 43% of the state is seeing the most severe level of drought. While some parts of the state are seeing the intense drought conditions, the dryness is extremely variable across the state.

kansas drought

"It's amazing. If you go 30 miles east of me, it's wetter than it is here. But if you go from here towards southwest Kansas, it's as dry here as it is there, which is not what we're used to,” says Keesling. "It's been dry like this for almost a year."

He says the variation in winter wheat crop conditions across even his own county is proof about how variable drought conditions are across the state.

“There was a lot of wheat that went in after fall crops, like after corn or soybeans, that did not germinate until later in the winter, because it was so dry,” he says. “Matter of fact, we had some wheat, that in severe cases, did not germinate until January or February when there was a light snow.”

USDA’s Crop Progress released on Monday showed 61% of the Kansas wheat crop is rated as being in poor to very poor condition.  

Kansas Wheat says farmers across much of the state are worried about their wheat crop. 

“Wheat is a pretty resilient crop, so it can hold on in some dry conditions. But especially as you get closer to southwest Kansas, a lot of it just didn't emerge in the fall,” says Marsha Boswell, vice president of communications for Kansas Wheat. “Coming out of dormancy, it needs some moisture to start growing again, and it's just not receiving any of the moisture that it needs.”

Back-to-Back Years of Drought

Boswell says while many farmers struggled through dry conditions last year, it’s the back-to-back years of dry weather that have been such a sharp blow to crops.

“Last year we were in a long-term drought, but what the difference is from last year is that subsoil moisture now is completely depleted. So last year in the drought, the wheat could pull from some of that subsoil moisture and go ahead and make a plant. It hasn't been replenished, and there's just no subsoil moisture there to pull from now.”

With sporadic chances of rain this weekend, many growers are holding onto hope at least some moisture will bring the crop out of such sluggish conditions. For some, it may already be too late.

“I was out and about and went to some areas in western Kansas, and I was told at that time that if they could get some moisture in the next week or two, this crop could pull out of this a little bit, but we haven't seen that,” Boswell says.

The Wheat Quality Council will hold its annual wheat tour across Kansas in mid-May, a time when maturing wheat will give farmers and others a better estimate of the quality and quantity of this year’s crop. 

“I think as we get farther to the west and up and around Colby that first night, and then that second day where we go from Colby to Wichita and through southwest Kansas, we're really going to see some tough conditions and some abandoned fields,” Boswell says.

Snapshot of National Winter Wheat Crop Conditions

Nationally, USDA’s Crop Progress report showed only 27% of the country’s winter wheat crop is rated good to excellent.

“This is probably one of our weakest crop progress reports for conditions in 40 years,” says Ben Brown, agricultural economics Extension specialist for the University of Missouri. “I mean, this is tied with 1996 in some states, and 1996 was a pretty poor year for wheat producers.”

wheat

University of Missouri Extension economist Ben Brown says the eastern half of the country is seeing strong wheat conditions, with more farmers in states like Illinois, Ohio and Michigan potentially taking that crop to harvest instead of only using the wheat as a cover crop during the winter months.

“On the other side of the scale, I wouldn't be surprised to see some pretty strong abandonment in places like the panhandle of Texas, Oklahoma, and southwest Kansas,” says Brown. “Just too poor of conditions. Maybe there will be the opportunity to plant another crop in there and hope for some rainfall later in the season.”

Possible High Abandonment of U.S. Winter Wheat

Keesling isn’t sure how much of his crop will need to be abandoned, as he says it’s just too early to know. Across the state, severely drought-stricken fields aren’t showing much promise, and the likelihood is growing that more winter wheat fields won’t be harvested this year.  

“I think there's no question there's going to be some abandonment, probably higher than in a lot of years, because the wheat just isn't up and it's not growing,” says Boswell.

What makes that reality so hard is the current price of wheat, even if some question whether today’s prices truly reflect how bad this winter wheat crop really is.

"I think there's an understanding that yes, we're dealing with less room to spare here, if you will, but we've still got a pretty healthy global wheat picture, even with some of these challenges here in the United States. And then certainly with the continued challenges in the Black Sea Region," says Brown. "So, understanding all those conditions, as well as kind of what’s weighing on some of this market a little bit.”

The Black Sea Wild Card 

The future of the Black Sea Grain Initiative is currently very murky. The Russian ag minister says Russia won’t renew the grain deal until the West’s sanctions on Russian food and fertilizer are lifted.

According to Farm Journal Washington Correspondent Jim Wiesemeyer, senior Russian diplomat Mikhail Ulyanov commented on the situation on Friday, saying the West still has time to remove “obstacles” hindering the implementation of the Black Sea grain deal before a deadline set for May 18.

“Every time we've seen this kind of come around, and these flares that it doesn't look like the grain deal is getting renewed, we've seen a 25- to 50-cent rally in the wheat market. And that's just kind of the nature of the game right now,” says Brown.


Read More: Is Russia Taking a Page Out of China's Playbook By Working to Take Control of Its Grain Industry?


 

Dan Basse, president of AgResource Company, says intense challenges in Ukraine are dimming the outlook for the upcoming crop there.

“The Ukrainians are struggling mightily, as you can imagine,” says Basse. “They can't find fertilizer, seed supplies are several years old, the price of diesel is now up to $34 a gallon. Imagine farming with that. And so, numbers will be coming down. I think, actually, this year's Ukrainian crop export program will be well below last year.”

And he says as Russia works to gain control of its domestic grain export program, it could be Russian farmers who suffer.

“We still believe they'll be able to get some technology from Syngenta and maybe Bayer and some others on the seed side, but longer term, I think there's going to be a drag in production out of the Black Sea in general, including Russia and Ukraine.

Focus on Producing a Crop Through the Drought 

As Kansas farmers work to provide the wheat needed for the rest of the world, Keesling says the reality is tough, but the drought hasn’t completely wiped out hope of producing at least some type of crop this year.

“Farmers, as a whole, have a lot of faith that there will be rain,” he says. “And so, I’m trying to be as optimistic as I can be even though sometimes some of these crop conditions behind us don't always look it. We have faith that we will get rain and that something will turn around.”

 

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