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USDA: Corn planting hits 71% vs 70% avg, soybeans at 32%

Winter wheat slips to 51% good/excellent from 53%.

Bob Burgdorfer, Senior Editor

May 16, 2017

9 Slides

Farmers planted a lot of corn this past week particularly in Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota, as a few days of warm, dry weather were enough to get them back in the fields.

USDA said 71% of the corn and 32% of the soybean were planted, versus the averages of 70% and 32%.

Iowa’s corn planting jumped to 85% from last week’s 52%, Minnesota was 84% from 35%, North Dakota 58% from 23% and South Dakota 77% from 32%. All of those numbers topped the five-year averages for those states.

“Statewide there were 4.5 days suitable for fieldwork. This allowed farmers to plant one-third of the state’s expected corn acreage and just under one-third of the state’s expected soybean acreage,” Iowa said its state report. “The dry and warm weather also aided crop emergence.”

Iowa’s soybeans were 40% planted versus the 32% average.

Illinois corn planting went to 75% from last week’s 65%, but was short of the 77% five-year average. Emergence was 47% versus the 50% average. Illinois rated its emerged corn 7% excellent, 35% good, 42% fair, 13% poor and 3% very poor.

Nationally, winter wheat condition slipped 2 points to 51% good/excellent, with Illinois wheat posting another big drop, while the storm-hit Kansas crop improved a little. The Illinois state report did not provide a specific reason for wheat dropping to 52% good/excellent from last week’s 60%, but the state had about .9 inch of rain over the past week and 1.9 days suitable for fieldwork.

Kansas wheat improved 1 point to 44% good/excellent. That crop is still recovering from the late April storm that produced up to a foot of snow in western areas.

“Winter wheat yield production dropped last week with our two models narrowing to a range of 46 to 46.8 bpa,” said Bryce Knorr, Farm Futures senior grain analyst.

Spring wheat planting reached 78% and emergence 40%, compared with the 73% and 44% averages. North Dakota spring wheat was 72% planted versus the 63% average and 31% emerged versus the 35% average.

“Producers in parts of southern North Dakota indicated that additional moisture is needed to help germinate recently planted seeds. There were 6.4 days suitable for fieldwork,” North Dakota said.

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