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Posted By: huntsman22 wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Our wheat was cut this week. This morning there were some combines on a ridge across the highway. I thought the sunrise looked good with them lined up.

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Posted By: keystoneben Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Cool pic
Posted By: 257heaven Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Beautiful!
Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Thanks, gentlemen. I sent to 4 news in Denver. Maybe they'll put on TV...
Posted By: antelope_sniper Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Huntsman, how was the harvest?
Posted By: OrangeOkie Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Wheat harvest is under way in Oklahoma


In some areas of Oklahoma, this year's wheat crop has suffered through drought, freezes, hail and more.

by Bryan Painter
Modified: June 8, 2013 at 12:18 am
Published: June 10, 2013

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A yardstick stuck in a crack on June 3,
went 20 inches deep in a wheat field of
David Gammill's near Faxon. Since, about
2.5 inches of rain has fallen in this particular
area, after the start of harvest.
David McDaniel - The Oklahoman


As the yardstick sank in a crack at David Gammill's powder-dry wheat field, the
farmer's heart plummeted as well. The wooden measuring stick went 20 inches
into the southern Oklahoma earth.

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Behind Gammill, his son, Josh, was at the helm of a John Deere 9600 combine
harvesting wheat in a field near Faxon.David McDaniel - The Oklahoman


In a good year, that 30-foot header on the machine would be gathering 40
bushels per acre, David Gammill said. This time, they hope it'll make 15
bushels.

Wheat harvest has started in Oklahoma. And as usual, the outcomes likely will
vary not only throughout the state, but possibly within counties.

The Gammills are an example of the angst and determination that mark each
Oklahoma wheat harvest.

�We thought that first field we cut would only make 5 bushels and we got 15.
This should be about the same,� David Gammill, 59, said of the field near
Faxon. �Right now, with all the crop has been through, we feel fortunate to get
that much.�

Mark Hodges, executive director of Plains Grains Inc./Oklahoma Genetics Inc.,
which tests wheat for quality, recently traveled to southern Oklahoma visiting
some producers who are in harvest, including Gammill. Seeing the cracks, he
went to his pickup for some baling wire to poke into the ground to get an idea
of the depth. But he happened to find the yardstick in the truck's cab.

Even though Gammill's heart dropped when the yardstick sank past a foot and
started approaching 2 feet, this wasn't breaking news. He's watched the cracks
multiply and widen for months.

He knows this crop has endured drought and at least five freezes just to get to
this point.

What next?

Gammill had the wheat crop of his dreams in 2008, cutting 50 bushels per acre.
The next year, a late freeze wiped him out. In 2010, the 28 bushels an acre
was close to his average. In 2011, combines harvested 9-bushel-an-acre
wheat in his fields. Last year, some of his neighbors' crops got hailed out while
Gammill came away with 35 bushels an acre.

Ups and down. The challenges are usually more bountiful than the crops.

�That's why you're truly paranoid about being ready and in the field as soon as
it will harvest,� he said.

Time to harvest

Minutes earlier Josh Gammill, 31, had pulled the combine alongside a truck to
dump the wheat. He got out, and his father handed him lunch in a small ice
chest. He climbed back into the cab of the combine. There are few to no breaks
when it's possible to harvest.

�When you get into the field you have to stay with it,� Josh Gammill said.

Thinking back to the months before wheat harvest, David Gammill couldn't
remember a real good rain since the 2 inches in October. And once the wheat
was ready, they needed to get it harvested before rains came. As it turned out,
they received about 2.5 inches of rain this past week, in his particular area, just
days after starting harvest.

�A rain on wheat that's ready to harvest can lower the test weight, which will
cause the wheat to weigh less per bushel and lower the yield,� he said. �As thin
as this wheat in our fields is, it should only have a minor effect on the overall
yield, but the test weight and the quality will be less.�

Adapting with time

Through the years, the Gammill family has raised crops and cattle. In 1995,
David Gammill got into the insurance business. In 2006, he bought into an
agency at Grandfield. His son helps him run that. They are examples of
families who use off-farm incomes to help them remain on the farm. That's
where they want to stay.

�The older I get, the more I appreciate my childhood,� Josh Gammill said. �Even
the days that I didn't like working and wanted to go do something else, I'm
glad I was here, doing this.�

This year

What are the estimates for this year's Oklahoma wheat crop?

�Well, that depends on who you talk to, ranging from 100 million-bushel crop
down to some are estimating below 70 million bushels,� Hodges said. �My
estimate is not as low as 70 million, but I'm on the lower side of that range.�

Hodges, 59, said the five-year average in Oklahoma is 118 million bushels of
wheat.

�But within that 118 million there's years with 70-plus million, there's last year
with 154 to 155 million, so there's a very wide range in there,� he said. �If you
think back 10 or 15 years, the long-term average was 160 million bushels in
the state. But now there are less planted acres. This year, there's going to be a
lot less harvested acres.�

In a back office of Co-op Services Inc. grain elevator in Lawton sits General
Manager Charlie Swanson. He talks about how the freeze hurt a crop already
battered by drought. Then some of his producers received hail damage.

�I think we'll be lucky to take in a third of what we did last year,� said Swanson,
63. �We'll probably be close to 50 percent of an average crop, but we're thrilled
to get that much after what we've been through.�

Ripple effects

The drought's effects don't necessarily end when rains come. And a lesser crop
will have ripple economic effects, Swanson said.

�It even affects our business down the road because people won't buy as much
fertilizer,� he said. �They won't have the money to buy it like they do when they
make a good crop.�

Josh Gammill's presence at the wheel of the combine is an economic decision.
Because they anticipated a small crop, the Gammills didn't think they could
justify paying for custom harvesters. That, in turn, can affect communities
where expenses by crews can include diesel, food, rooms and other necessities
for life on the road.

As the combine behind him makes another round in the wheat field, David
Gammill says:

�We're optimistic I guess. You just hope you get one of those good years often
enough so you can still pay the bills.�

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Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Looked good with all the late rain. Then we had a bad hailstorm...

The guy that farms it said the machines had some areas that said zero, and others up to 47. Whatever that means. I ain't a farmer, so don't know. I do know he turned it into the crop insurance, but have no idea how that works.
Posted By: EthanEdwards Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Pretty picture. Thanks.

Thanks to Orange Okie too for the rundown.
Posted By: EthanEdwards Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Originally Posted by huntsman22
Looked good with all the late rain. Then we had a bad hailstorm...

The guy that farms it said the machines had some areas that said zero, and others up to 47. Whatever that means. I ain't a farmer, so don't know. I do know he turned it into the crop insurance, but have no idea how that works.
That's realistic. I hear inflated yields around here all the time. The yields on this thread thus far sound like stuff I used to have when I raised wheat.
Posted By: OrangeOkie Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Oklahoma wheat farmers brace for poor harvest

Drought, late freeze damage wheat crop. Some feel it could be the worst crop in
state history.

by Brianna Bailey
Modified: May 1, 2014 at 9:00 am
Published: April 30, 2014

Oklahoma farmers anticipate this year�s wheat harvest to be one of the poorest
in decades after a late freeze in April and ongoing drought conditions in the
western part of the state.

[Linked Image]
Oklahoma farmers anticipate this year�s
wheat harvest to be one of the poorest in
decades. Photo By David McDaniel,
The Oklahoman Archives


Oklahoma farmers anticipate this year�s wheat harvest to be one of the poorest
in decades. The Oklahoma Grain and Feed Association projected at its annual
meeting Wednesday that Oklahoma�s wheat harvest would be about 66.5
million bushels this year. The estimate is based on reports on crop conditions
from farmers around the state. That compares to a yield of 105.4 million
bushels in 2013, and a 154.8 million bushels in 2012.

The 2014 wheat harvest will go down in history as one of the state�s lowest
yields in decades, said Joe Neal Hampton, president and CEO of the Oklahoma
Grain and Feed Association.

�In 43 years, this is the worst crop statewide that I�ve ever seen � it�s going to
be a tough year,� Hampton said. While farmers in the state will be able to get
by with the assistance of federal crop insurance, grain elevator operators in the
state will have a difficult year, he said.

Drought conditions in the Panhandle and southwest Oklahoma are particularly
bad, Hampton said. Farmers in the state also are bracing for temperatures
expected next week in the 90s that could do even further damage to their
already parched fields, he said.

The wheat crop in Tillman County is so poor that Mike Cassidy, co-owner of
Cassidy Grain Co., estimates that less than 10 percent of the crop will be
harvested. Crops in southwest Oklahoma were already stressed from drought
and an April 15 freeze caused further damage, Cassidy said.

In 35 years of farming, Cassidy said this year�s wheat crop in is one of the
poorest he has ever seen.

�I thought that last year was the worst year. I thought that that was as bad as it
could get, until this year,� said Cassidy, who also co-owns a grain elevator with
his brother in Frederick.

In Kingfisher, the late freeze hit at a critical time for crop development, said
Mike Rosen, of grain elevator operator Wheeler Brothers Grain Co. Inc.
Posted By: antelope_sniper Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Originally Posted by huntsman22
Looked good with all the late rain. Then we had a bad hailstorm...

The guy that farms it said the machines had some areas that said zero, and others up to 47. Whatever that means. I ain't a farmer, so don't know. I do know he turned it into the crop insurance, but have no idea how that works.


I think that's bushels per acre (I'm sure someone can correct me if I'm wrong).

47 BPH would be a nice crop.
Posted By: milespatton Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Quote
47 BPH would be a nice crop.


Yes it would. My Brother-in- law told me the other day, that his corn yield would we way down due to wind this year. Said that a lot of the stalks broke off at the ground out in the field. Said that you could not tell from the road but had to walk out into the field. He is worried about making his bookings. miles
Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
We lost our all of our dryland corn 2 years ago to the frigging wind....
Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Just finished 2400 acres of dry peas last night. Starting on 6500 acres of dryland wheat today. Our yeilds on peas have been average and I cut some truck roads out of the wheat last week and the yield monitor was reading around 85 so we will see what it looks like after today.
Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
NW CO?
Posted By: SamOlson Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Cool pic Don!


I've heard if you spray Round-up ready corn when it's past a certain height it can become brittle? I'm not a corn expert though.

Our little wheat crop needs another rain to help it fill.


Damn Blu, that is some major acreage!

What state is your farm located?

(just noticed your sig line, WA?)
Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Jeez, sam. I didn't even notice the WA part. Thanks. I was wondering if it was blue mtn near Dinosaur. Mainly because I couldn't recollect ever seeing wheat/beans in that country.
Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Sorry huntsman did not mean confuse you. If I could figure out how to post pictures I would. The field we are opening today we will spend most of the day out of level after the combine has leveled over to 35 degrees.
Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
I'm easily cornfused. I tend not to read below the line.....grin

35 degrees? This place is flat as a table.....
Posted By: wabigoon Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Sam, 2,4D make any corn brittle.
As far as I know, Roundup ready corn can take a lot of glyphosate .
Posted By: kaywoodie Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Very nice pic! Thanks!
Posted By: SamOlson Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Originally Posted by wabigoon
Sam, 2,4D make any corn brittle.
As far as I know, Roundup ready corn can take a lot of glyphosate .




Richard, maybe that's what it was, that or Banvel have a similar affect?

(I know squat about all the different chemicals)
Posted By: Akbob5 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Nice picture Don. Always appreciate the threads about crops and harvesting although I know very little about it. In my mind it represents the best (or what may be left) of Americana and the American spirit.
Posted By: Bigbuck215 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
For several years in the early fifties I went with a wheat harvest crew and back then a field that would put out 20 BPA was very good. All dry land but once in a great while we would hit an irrigated field and get up to around 40 or so. Things have changed, huh.
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14


Cool picture Hunts.
Thanks.

She's gonna be about 20 off here this year.....
It got cooked.
Posted By: antelope_sniper Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Originally Posted by Akbob5
Nice picture Don. Always appreciate the threads about crops and harvesting although I know very little about it. In my mind it represents the best (or what may be left) of Americana and the American spirit.


There is a common sense that comes from working the land that cannot be duplicated else where.
Posted By: SamOlson Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Originally Posted by wageslave


Cool picture Hunts.
Thanks.

She's gonna be about 20 off here this year.....
It got cooked.



Our's might average 20. Never did catch a thunderstorm this Summer, been pretty quiet.

At least, hopefully the protein should be okay with reduced yields.

Mowed/weed-eated around the bins this morning. Imagine we'll bin everything we can, price is way down.


Guys are cutting peas and some winter wheat. Not in full swing yet here, couple weeks.
Posted By: wabigoon Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Sam, dicamba/ Banvel, and it goes by other names as well, might make corn brittle.
Both dicamba, and 2,4,D. are growth regulators, they grow the weeds to death. Some of that may transfer to corn, and cause some brittleness.
I think that is hit, and miss, and lasts for only so long.
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
We got some big hail in the area the other day.
Peas don't look that much different until you look up close.
Pods are split and all the peas are on the ground.
Lentils got pounded flat.....I mean like can't pick them up no way, flat.
Broke off whole garb plants....
Grain faired better.
Luckily, it was in isolated spots.
You is a farmer, Sam. Always lookin' on the bright side.....(protein)


laffin'.
Posted By: SamOlson Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Richard, I am taking notes!


Wages, hate to hear about the big white combine.


I remember a few 'harvests' like that. Not the way you wanna do it.
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
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Posted By: SamOlson Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Ouch....
Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
pfffffffffttt.....

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Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
no mas, no mas.
you win.
Posted By: SamOlson Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
That could kill a decent sized animal.



Damn!
Posted By: Scotty Re: wheat harvest - 07/27/14
Nice pictures of the combines.
Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/28/14
thanks. wish I could have got a mile or 2 closer..... thank goodness for 20x zoom.
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Posted By: BC30cal Re: wheat harvest - 07/28/14
Originally Posted by huntsman22
pfffffffffttt.....

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huntsman22;
Those hailstones certainly drag out some memories for me this hot July afternoon for me Don, thanks for posting the photos even though the memories are bittersweet.

The last year we farmed in Saskatchewan we had a canola crop that was 5' high and looked to be a near record yield too that got smoked with hail about that size. We kept some of them in the freezer for years actually as we'd grown up there and never had imagined them that big.

To what Sam said, there was at least one heifer down the road a bit that was killed by the storm, but she might have piled up in the fence all lathered up running from the storm and then died from the cold induced by the hail that piled up on her.

For sure a whole bunch of chickens and geese died that afternoon and my goodness the hail damage on vehicles and houses in the small town nearby was surreal to say the least. No windows were left on two sides of the houses in town for instance and the siding and shingles were wrecked too.

Anyway Don, if we'd not had that storm turn our canola crop into what looked like a freshly mowed golf course afterward, we'd not have lost everything and subsequently drifted out here to BC. So it did turn out for the best, though at the time it was a tough pill to swallow.

Thanks again for the farming photos sir, I always appreciate folks putting them up. All the best to you in the upcoming week.

Dwayne
Posted By: DakotaDeer Re: wheat harvest - 07/28/14
Wheat is looking really good in the eastern Dakotas. Winter wheat in SD is averaging over 50 in what has been started.
Posted By: Bricktop Re: wheat harvest - 07/28/14
Not wheat, but here's what our first cut of hay in Southeast Oklahoma is looking like this summer:

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Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 07/28/14
Had a poopy day today only got about 200 acres cut today. bright side is the wheat is going about 90.
Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 07/29/14
Some pictures from last year. Hard to show how steep a hill really is with a picture. This hill is about a 40 degree slope.

[image][image][image][Linked Image][image]

[image][image][image][Linked Image][image]

They are loading on the go on about a 25 degree sloop.
[image][image][image][Linked Image][image]

Got things working good yesterday with only one combine having a minor hickup and still managed to get 24 semi-loads in.
Posted By: cowdoc Re: wheat harvest - 07/29/14
How much does a Hillco kit add to combine cost?
Posted By: viking Re: wheat harvest - 07/29/14
We just got back from ND yesterday. The small grain crops up in the Dakotas look really good so far. The row crops look great, now if jack frost doesn't get them....otherwise silage is the word.
Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 07/29/14
Actually these are Rayco levelers. And they add about 125,000.00 to the cost of the combine. I prefer the Hillcos but they do not level as far over.
Posted By: MadMooner Re: wheat harvest - 07/29/14
Blu- I spend a little time out by Dayton every year. Every time I see those hills and the equipment working the slopes I get puckered up.

Some steep country for sure!

Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Yep, sweet pics....
I know that country..... grin
Posted By: ironbender Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Palouse?
Posted By: ironbender Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Classic! Nice, Don.

Originally Posted by huntsman22
thanks. wish I could have got a mile or 2 closer..... thank goodness for 20x zoom.
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Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Originally Posted by ironbender
Palouse?


We are considered the western edge of the palouse country.
Posted By: keystoneben Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Looks pretty steep from here.

How much ground can you guys cover on a good day?
Posted By: northern_dave Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Are you guys all down on the equator or wtf?

Our grain crops are still green and growing. Only thing cut up here so far is the grass seed crops (mostly rye and bluegrass).

Posted By: deflave Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Originally Posted by BluMtn
Some pictures from last year. Hard to show how steep a hill really is with a picture. This hill is about a 40 degree slope.


Looks plenty steep to me...



Travis
Posted By: deflave Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Originally Posted by northern_dave
Are you guys all down on the equator or wtf?

Our grain crops are still green and growing. Only thing cut up here so far is the grass seed crops (mostly rye and bluegrass).



The world does not revolve around Poland, sir.

Out west they plant everything July 1st and harvest July 29th.

That's how they doos it out here.



Travis
Posted By: KC Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14

Huntsman22:

The TV reported that Kiowa got 5" of rain last night. Are you keeping your head above water? Everything OK?

KC

Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
We didn't get that much. Maybe 4 inches the last 3 days. It was enuff to wash out all my watergaps on my fences and the road in, is in bad shape. Can't get a car in, but pickups can make it. At least the wheat was put up before all this chit hit......
Posted By: edk Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Our crops in northern North Dakota are just filling. Look to be very good if nothing happens. Finally got some dry and warm weather which will help. ED K
Posted By: ironbender Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Originally Posted by BluMtn
Originally Posted by ironbender
Palouse?


We are considered the western edge of the palouse country.


Looks like where my inlaws live - Pullman, WA.
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Whetstone.....SW 50 miles from Coug town.
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/30/14
Originally Posted by huntsman22
We didn't get that much. Maybe 4 inches the last 3 days. It was enuff to wash out all my watergaps on my fences and the road in, is in bad shape. Can't get a car in, but pickups can make it. At least the wheat was put up before all this chit hit......



Wanna borrow my snorkel and fins?
Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 07/31/14
Originally Posted by wageslave
Whetstone.....SW 50 miles from Coug town.


Pretty close to the area we are working right now. If everything works correctly including dealing with a windmill project that uses the same roads as our semis do we can get 300 acres a day.
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 07/31/14
Turner?
Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 08/01/14
Alto
Posted By: Mule Deer Re: wheat harvest - 08/01/14
Saw the first combines cutting in this part of Montana today, about 15 miles north of Three Forks. We didn't get any extra moisture here but got most of it at the right time. The crops are looking good, though some of the spring wheat is at least a couple weeks away.
Posted By: Tarkio Re: wheat harvest - 08/01/14
Barley harvest is on here. Has been for a few days now and is quickly wrapping up. The local Coors elevator upgraded their facility a few years back and it has really sped up the time to offload which has cut harvest time way down.
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 08/01/14
10-4.
They are just getting going good here on top (Palouse and/or The Prairie].
Low valley is almost done.
Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 08/03/14
Had a little thunderstorm roll through last night so decided to take Sunday off. Felt good to sleep in this morning. Took my camera with me yesterday and took a few pictures.


Starting the day looking over what we did the day before.
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This is where we are headed for the day.
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Posted By: BluMtn Re: wheat harvest - 08/03/14
This hill can only be cut down hill and it is done in a controlled drift/slide. Makes for an interesting day.

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Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 08/09/14
[img]https://fbcdn-sphotos-e-a.akamaihd....7266480_41dec3b3739f4bdeaacd8851572c701d[/img]

This guy takes great harvest pics.....
These were with a drone....

Camas Prairie, Id.


Posted By: huntsman22 Re: wheat harvest - 08/09/14
the guys showed up to spray today.

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Posted By: Sharpsman Re: wheat harvest - 08/09/14
I'd rather use this:

[Linked Image]RickMulhernSprayingCotton2005 by Sharps45 2 7/8, on Flickr
Posted By: wageslave Re: wheat harvest - 08/09/14

Lots of both here.....
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