Wheat Quality Council’s HRW Wheat Crop Tour Day Two Sees 27.5 Bushels Per Acre in Fields Likely to Be Harvested

Field in Wichita County- Short, Drought Stressed and will need more rain to make a crop- Picture on Twitter from K-State Wheat Specialist Romulo Lollato

On Wednesday, approximately 106 people on the Wheat Quality Council’s 2023 winter wheat tour made their way from Colby to Wichita, Kansas, stopping in wheat fields along six different routes. 

Wednesday’s wheat tour scouts made 276 stops at wheat fields across western, central and southern Kansas, and into northern counties in Oklahoma. The wheat in Southwest Kansas looks rough, with intense drought conditions, poor stands and some freeze damage. During the tour, participants saw how far east these drought conditions reached. Short wheat plants even extended into central Kansas, like around Wichita. In central Kansas, many scouts reported seeing hail damaged wheat, and the first apparent signs of pest damage.

Wheat field west of Larned in Pawnee County- if it is harvested, Scouts calculated it at 9 bushels per acre

One of the participants that was in group that dipped into Oklahoma was the President of the Oklahoma Wheat Growers, Dennis Schoenhals. Oklahoma Farm Report’s Ron Hays talked with him last night about the fields they stopped and surveyed – click on the listen bar below to hear their conversation.

Ron Hays talks with OWGA President Dennis Schoenhals about what he saw on Day Two of the Wheat Quality Council’s Hard Red Winter Wheat Crop Tour
Detail from the Routes and Cars traveling Day Two of the Wheat Qaulity Council’s Hard Red Winter Wheat Crop Tour

The calculated yield from all cars was 27.5 bushels per acre. This yield estimate is only for the fields that will make it to harvest, and does not account for the large amount of abandoned fields that were seen. This compares to the 37 bushel per acre average for day two a year ago and 56.7 bushels per acre seen two years ago in 2021.

Scouts were able to mainly use the late season formula provided by USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, which includes counting wheat heads, number of spikelets and kernels per spikelet. The calculated yields were based on this formula, but many tour participants remarked that those yields seemed high. The wheat is so short that some of the heads will not be able to be picked up by the combines at harvest. The yield formula doesn’t take abandonment, disease, pests or weed pressure into consideration. Scouts saw some instances of wheat streak mosaic virus, into areas farther east than expected or typical, but western Kansas didn’t have many instances of WSMV because of the drought. 

Some of the best wheat seen by scouts came in Barton County- this field was calculated at 50 bushels per acre but was turning blue from drought and running out of water

Mike Schulte from Oklahoma Wheat Commission actually had multiple numbers to share with the scouts gathered in Wichita- Two of those numbers came from the May 2nd report session at the Oklahoma Grain and Feed Association- click here for our coverage from May second– those numbers were 54.3 million bushels seen by the district by district reports and 40.7 million bushels guestimated by the members of the Grain and Feed Association in downtown OKC that morning. He also reported on the USDA estimate of last week showing 49.9 million bushels, with about 2.2 million acres of wheat harvested out of 4.6 million acres planted. USDA estimated yield of 23 bushels per acre. Schulte told the Wichita meeting that the USDA number of 49 million bushels seems to be right on target at this point as we near the harvest of the 2023 crop. Schulte reported the four largest wheat producing counties in Oklahoma are looking very rough, extremely dry. They did not receive enough moisture, and many farmers are cutting their wheat for hay.

Many of the day’s drivers were able to introduce wheat tour participants to farmers around western Kansas. Getting this chance for end users to talk with producers gives everyone across the industry a glimpse into each other’s lives and how they contribute to the “grain chain.”

For one participant, Mariam Dunlin with Ardent Mills, this was her first wheat tour.

“I have been so excited to be able to get out into the field, see the wheat growing, talk to farmers, learn more about the industry that I really only have a small materialist snapshot of what actually happens,” Dunlin said. “The first day I was with a farmer that was one of people in my car, just learning about how much management for several years goes into producing the wheat crop. You might be planting cover crop, beans, soybeans, corn, for three and four years, you might be leaving your field fallow to be able to for one year grow, hopefully grow a wheat crop that will pay off and be a high yield, high quality crop and just getting to know about that I think has been a massive eye opener.”

Field in Lane County- Lots of weeds- Scouts calculate it at 13.8 bushels per acre

Wheat Tour 23 continues Thursday with six routes between Wichita and Manhattan. Follow along with the tour at #wheattour23. A final production estimate will be announced Thursday afternoon. 

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