Michigan Field Crops Show Slight Improvement From Last Week’s Rain

Field Crops
Timely rainfall continued to provide relief from the hot and dry conditions seen across much of the state in previous weeks, according to Marlo Johnson, Director of the Great Lakes Regional Office of the National Agricultural Statistics Service.

According to USDA’s Crop Progress Report for Michigan, there were 5.2 days suitable for fieldwork in Michigan during the week ending September 6, 2020.

The U.S. Drought Monitor indicated that approximately 20 percent of the State was experiencing abnormally dry conditions, down from 34 percent in the previous week.

Hay and pasture conditions held steady, as the week’s rains helped move corn and soybeans towards full maturity.

Corn silage harvest made significant progress in major growing areas.

Oat and barley threshing neared completion, as sugarbeet harvest continued as weather allowed.

Other activities included field preparation for seeding winter wheat and cover crops, installing and replacing drainage tile, and preparing crop storage infrastructure for harvest.

Corn
Dough: 92%
Dent: 63%
Mature: 9%
Silage harvest: 33%
Condition: 53% G/E, +3%

Soybeans
Dropping leaves: 19%
Condition: 61% G/E, +1%

Sugarbeets 
Condition: 53% G/E, +1%
Harvested: 5%

Dry Beans
Pod set: 99%
Condition: 42% G/E, +2%

Fruit
Cooler weather accompanied by some precipitation was welcomed last week. Most fruit growing areas remained in need of rain with farms still in a rainfall deficit. Fruit harvest continued along unabated.

Recent dry conditions caused premature fruit drop in peaches in the Southwest. Late season varieties like Glowingstar and Cresthaven were harvested there.

Apple harvest continued in the Southern Lower Peninsula. Ginger gold and early strains of Gala and Honeycrisp were harvested. Some other later maturing varieties were harvested for processing or taffy apples. Codling moth and Oriental Fruit moth were active in orchards. Apples in the Northwest benefitted from the return of cooler nights. Fruit was coloring and sizing well.

Blueberry harvest was nearly complete in Berrien and Van Buren counties. Growers closer to the Lake still had another picking of Aurora or Elliot to go.

Vegetables
Pumpkins and fall squash continued to mature and take on color; in a few areas, early harvest got underway. While Downy Mildew pressure had remained heavy in cucumbers, the variety that infects pumpkins and winter squash had not been reported in Michigan thus far.

Peppers in the East were ripening to colored stages.

Pest pressure in sweet corn remained low and harvest activities progressed across much of the State. Post-season field clean up and fall planted cover crop preparation continued.

Potato harvest was ongoing in most major growing areas as weather allowed. Late blight had not been detected in Michigan to date.

 

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