WINTER WHEAT WEBINAR. Why your Customers should be growing Winter Wheat Paul Thoroughgood P.Ag Ducks...

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Transcript of WINTER WHEAT WEBINAR. Why your Customers should be growing Winter Wheat Paul Thoroughgood P.Ag Ducks...

WINTER WHEAT WEBINAR

Why your Customers should be growing Winter Wheat

Paul Thoroughgood P.Ag

Ducks Unlimited Canada

Show me the Money!

• Winter Wheat is consistently a top performing crop across the Prairies

• Allows improved use of capital

• Provides “insurance” against inclement weather during May

and September

• Facilitation of more timely management of spring seeded crops

• Rotational benefits to other crops

• Expands grain marketing window

• Provides an ecological tool to manage herbicide resistance and pests

• Increases financial sustainability

Show me the Money!

Caring for our Environment

• Winter cereals are the only annual crop shown to provide productive nesting habitat for waterfowl

• Benefits to other ground nesting birds

• Increased productivity per acre

Long Term Adoption

• 2/3 of growers who have tried winter wheat with DUC have made it part of their long term rotation

• Many of these growers have become “repeat customers” in other DUC programs

Planning for Success

Mark Akins P.Ag CCA

Ducks Unlimited Canada

Planning is Key

• Planning is involved in growing all crops

• Winter wheat requires special attention – stubble needed for seeding – planning also makes

seeding at harvest simpler and less stressful

Planning=profitable winter wheat

Plan for Stubble

• Start planning for winter wheat prior to seeding your spring crop

• Choose a crop that provides adequate snow trapping

• Stubble must be available in Aug 15 to Sept 15 seeding window

Plan for Stubble

• Attention to seeding date, crop types and/or variety if crops generally mature late– Weatherman-ager at

www.wintercereals.ca

• Plans may not always come through so have a “plan B” crop in mind

The Weatherman-ager

 Physiological Maturity Date

  05 Aug 10 Aug 15 Aug 20 Aug 25 Aug 30 Aug 04 Sep 09 Sep 14 Sep 19 Sep

01 May 4 17 50 70 87 94 98 100 100 100

05 May 2 13 43 67 83 89 98 100 100 100

10 May 2 9 35 57 74 85 93 96 100 100

15 May 2 6 28 54 69 80 87 93 94 98

20 May 2 2 11 44 63 74 85 89 94 98

25 May 0 2 6 22 50 67 76 85 87 94

30 May 0 0 2 9 30 50 65 81 85 87

04 Jun 0 0 0 2 15 31 48 69 81 87

09 Jun 0 0 0 0 2 11 28 43 59 69

Prince Albert, Saskatchewan (4056240)The table below was generated from Environment Canada weather station data collected from 1945 to 1998.

Crops -  Argentine Canola

Harvesting Stubble Crop

• Winter wheat is most successful when direct seeded into standing stubble

– Cut stubble as high as possible– Spread straw and

chaff evenly over the field

– Avoid excessive traffic in field access points and headlands

Logistics

• Prepare equipment early

• Have seed ready

• Fill the drill

• Plan for getting inputs to the field

• May want to swap seeding and harvest with a trusted neighbor

Seeding Opportunities

• Multi-tasking doesn’t always work

• Take advantage of the weather

• Use GPS and auto-steer to make the most of your day

• The first year is the most challenging

Seeding Musts

Melissa Stanford, Agrologist

Ducks Unlimited Canada

1. Seed Early

Timing:• North – August 15 - 20• Central – August 25 - September 5• South – No later than September 15

• Don’t delay seeding to wait for moisture!– Waiting too long results in 5-10% yield loss per

week delayed

2. Seed Shallow

• Optimal depth = better seedling vigor and winter hardiness

• ½”-1” deep

• Target is 3-4 leaf stage prior to freeze up

3. Seed Into Stubble

• Standing stubble does it all

• The best crops for stubble

• How much stubble is enough?

3. Seed Into Stubble, cont’d

• Adequate Snow Trapping Potential– Pre-seeding 40 or

greater– Post-seeding 20 or

greater

STP = stubble height in cm × # stems/m2

100

4. Seed Heavy

• 1.5-2.5 bushels per acre

• Target plant populations:– Fall: 30 plants/sq.ft.– Spring: 18-23 plants/sq.ft.

Consider 1000 kernel weight and germination

5. Other Considerations

• Manage straw and chaff at harvest

• Apply phosphate with the seed and some starter nitrogen

• Consider a pre- or post-harvest glyphosate application for a clean start

• Be mindful of potential herbicide residue issues

Questions?

Thank you for joining us today.