— Crop development: 55% of soybeans had emerged as of Sunday, 14 points behind last year’s 69% but 3 points ahead of the five-year average of 52%.

WINTER WHEAT

— Crop development: 83% of winter wheat was headed as of Sunday. That was 4 points ahead of 79% at this time last year and 5 points ahead of the five-year average of 78%. “Montana, Idaho and South Dakota are lagging at 12%, 18% and 22% headed, respectively,” noted DTN Senior Analyst Dana Mantini.

— Harvest progress: 6% of the nation’s winter wheat crop was harvested as of Sunday, 3 points ahead of both last year and the five-year average pace of 3%. “Texas’ winter wheat harvest is at 33% complete, and Oklahoma is at 22%, both ahead of the average pace,” Mantini said.

— Crop condition: 49% of the crop was rated in good-to-excellent condition, up 1 point from 48% the previous week and still up considerably from 36% a year ago. The percentage rated very poor to poor was down 1 point to 18% and is still well below last year’s 34% at this time. “Kansas winter wheat is rated at 34% good to excellent with 34% of that crop poor to very poor,” Mantini noted.

SPRING WHEAT

— Planting progress: 94% of spring wheat was planted as of Sunday, 3 points ahead of 91% last year and 4 points ahead of the five-year average of 90%.

— Crop development: 78% of spring wheat has emerged, 7 points ahead of 71% last year and 9 points ahead of the five-year average of 69%.

— Crop condition: In its first condition rating of the season for spring wheat, NASS estimated that 74% of the crop was in good-to-excellent condition nationwide, 10 points higher than last year’s good-to-excellent rating of 64%. “Minnesota’s and North Dakota’s spring wheat crops are rated 80% and 82% good to excellent, respectively, while South Dakota leads the pack at 86% good to excellent,” Mantini said.

THE WEEK AHEAD IN WEATHER

Two more storm systems could hamper planting progress in the first half of this week, but that will be followed by drier, cooler conditions the second half of the week into next week, according to DTN Ag Meteorologist John Baranick.

“Areas of heavy rain have been a hindrance to the remaining planting, though producers have made some incredible progress anyway,” Baranick said. “Two storm systems continue that obstacle through Wednesday. The upper-level pattern will be changing, promoting a drier and cooler pattern for the remainder of the week and through next week as well, but there are going to be some areas that stay wet anyway.

“The second storm system will ball up in the Great Lakes and continue showers around there through the weekend. That system will also leave behind a front in the Central Plains that should start to get active through early next week and will probably extend into the Tennessee Valley this weekend. We are likely to see another system move through the country early-to-mid next week with more scattered showers and thunderstorms.

“The rain hasn’t been all bad, as it has fallen on the last vestiges of the drought in the Midwest, and the building drought across western Kansas, but those with crops yet to plant or needing to replant will still see obstacles. Soil moisture is really good around the country, though, and there are not very many pockets that really need the rain at this point in the season. For much of the country, the continued rain and good soil moisture is good news for early growth.”

**

Editor’s Note: How are your crops looking? Are they better, worse or right on track with USDA NASS’ observations this week? Send us your comments, and we’ll add them to the Crop Progress report story. You can email comments to Anthony.greder@dtn.com or direct message him on social platform X @AGrederDTN. Please include the location of where you farm.

**

To view weekly crop progress reports issued by National Ag Statistics Service offices in individual states, visit http://www.nass.usda.gov/…. Look for the U.S. map in the “Find Data and Reports by” section and choose the state you wish to view in the drop-down menu. Then look for that state’s “Crop Progress & Condition” report.

National Crop Progress Summary This Last Last 5-Year Week Week Year Avg. Corn Planted 91 83 95 89 Corn Emerged 74 58 81 73 Soybeans Planted 78 68 89 73 Soybeans Emerged 55 39 69 52 Winter Wheat Headed 83 77 79 78 Winter Wheat Harvested 6 NA 3 3 Spring Wheat Planted 94 88 91 90 Spring Wheat Emerged 78 61 71 69 Cotton Planted 70 59 68 70 Cotton Squaring 9 4 5 8 Sorghum Planted 51 42 47 46 Oats Planted 97 93 96 95 Oats Emerged 87 77 83 83 Oats Headed 33 29 30 28 Barley Planted 94 88 90 93 Barley Emerged 74 62 67 74 Rice Emerged 88 83 87 84

**

National Crop Condition Summary (VP=Very Poor; P=Poor; F=Fair; G=Good; E=Excellent) This Week Last Week Last Year VP P F G E VP P F G E VP P F G E Corn 1 3 21 60 15 NA NA NA NA NA 1 5 30 53 11 Winter Wheat 6 12 33 41 8 6 13 33 40 8 14 20 30 31 5 Spring Wheat – 2 24 69 5 NA NA NA NA NA – 2 34 58 6 Rice 1 1 17 67 14 1 2 17 65 15 – 3 27 59 11 Oat 4 5 23 58 10 4 5 25 58 8 6 7 30 53 4 Barley – 5 21 70 4 2 5 25 62 6 – 2 33 60 5 Cotton 3 5 31 54 7 1 4 35 52 8 1 11 37 43 8

Anthony Greder can be reached at anthony.greder@dtn.com

Following on social platform X @AGrederDTN

  

WE WANT YOU!

are you a developer?

  • Proven International Track Record
  • Vertically Integrated Federal Funds
  • Vertically Integrated Tax Credits
  • Vertically Integrated Investors
  • Vertically Integrated Lenders
  • Vertically Integrated Contractors