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craignd
Contributor

hard red winter

Why is wheat up in KC 16 cents when we are supposed to have harvest pressure going on?

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7 Replies
clayton58
Veteran Advisor

Re: hard red winter

What harvest pressure? A lot of acres were abandoned or hayed in our area.  I'm hearing MAYBE a 10 bu average on what is cutand NOBODY is excited to even get the combines out.  Usualyy we cant wait to get harvest going.  Local elevators will feel lucky to get 20% of normal receipts.  So again, NO HARVEST PRESSURE HERE

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Re: hard red winter

Heat dome is coming and informs says the USDA is lying
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Hobbyfarmer
Honored Advisor

Re: hard red winter

misinforma been reading here on Ag,com?

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sw363535
Honored Advisor

Re: hard red winter

maybe the market is actually reading the harvest reports coming out of the southern plains.

Hobbyfarmer
Honored Advisor

Re: hard red winter

15 Bu wheat isnt going to do much
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pritchh
Senior Contributor

Re: hard red winter

everyone knows HRW crop will be well below trendline.

 

how much is the Q.

mkt todays think worse.

 

SRW crop is so huge,  it is getting help..

 

for now.. sell

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sw363535
Honored Advisor

Re: hard red winter

Pritch,

 

I don't buy your line on srw.   srw doesn't have 30% of the acres of hrw.  Hrw accounts for more than double the acres of any other type of wheat in the US and over half of  the production of all type of wheat.  No other form of wheat has the potential to make up for the losses when HRW fails to produce.

 

That would be less than 7 million acres trying to make up for the losses of 24+ million acres.  I don't think we realized the significance of the attempt to rail wheat south for feed this year--------  to even consider that as an answer should give us a view of our supply condition.  

It means ------

One of the worlds largest wheat producing regions was out of attainable supply of wheat

The corn supply was so low that corn could not be sourced to meet feed needs.

 

Railing in wheat from the northern states to fill feeding gaps------------ That is such a rare historical occurance, and in reality it's like trying to water a crop with a 5 gallon bucket --------------- it is one of the facts that keeps me sitting on my hands pricing new crop.

We will produce again but it has taken us three hard years to get into this position.  We will not glut the market in one summer.  Getting ourselves in an overproduced position will take several years---------

 

 

--- or an act of congress.  🙂

 

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