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How much wheat can Michigan produce?

This year's acreage and yield forecast is expected to set records.

May 17, 2016

1 Min Read

Michigan winter wheat growers expect the statewide yield to be a new record high, according to Marlo Johnson, Director of the USDA, NASS, Great Lakes Regional Office. Michigan producers expect to harvest 560,000 acres, up 85,000 acres from last year. Wheat production in the Ssate is expected to be 47 million bushels. The yield forecast of 84 bushels would be 3 bushels above last year’s record high.

United States winter wheat production is forecast at 1.43 billion bushels, up 4% from 2015. As of May 1, the U.S. yield is forecast at 47.8 bushels per acre, up 5.3 bushels from last year. If realized, this will equal the record yield set in 1999.

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Hay stocks on Michigan farms on May 1 were 440,000 tons, down 10% from this time last year.

All  hay  stored  on  United  States  farms  as  of  May  1  totaled  25.1  million  tons,  up  3%  from  a  year  ago.

Disappearance between December 1, 2015 and May 1, 2016 totaled 69.9 million tons, compared with 67.5 million tons for the same period a year earlier. May 1 hay stocks were up slightly from the previous year as mild winter conditions throughout most of the nation did not extend supplemental feeding.

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