Winter Wheat Acreage Higher this Year in Alberta and Saskatchewan, Lower in Manitoba

Farmscape for December 9, 2013

Winter Cereals Canada reports the number of acres seeded to winter wheat last fall across the Canadian prairies was about the same as the previous year but the distribution has changed.
Last fall's late harvest created challenges for planting fall seeded cereals but crops that were planted are now covered by snow and are well protected from the cold.
Jake Davidson, the executive director of Winter Cereals Canada reports, according to figures released by Statistics Canada, the number of acres seeded to winter wheat fell in Manitoba but rose in Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Clip-Jake Davidson-Winter Cereals Canada:
Saskatchewan has reported to Stats Canada 525,000 acres seeded this last fall.
That is a significant increase from 390,000 that were seeded in the previous year of which only 340,000 is estimated to have been harvested which was about a 13 percent loss.
Unfortunately Manitoba took a bit of a hit.
Our seeded acreage this year is reported at 435 where as last year we had 600,000 acres seeded but we took a real kicking last year.
We only pulled off 440,000 acres, a 27 percent loss so, if this is a good winter, we may actually with a significantly lowered seeding acreage we may not be that much different in harvested acres taken out because if we don't have the losses we had last year we could come up to pretty near the same numbers.
Alberta has got about 195,000 which is up from their last year's 165,000 and they don't have much in the way of winter kill there.
They had six percent loss last year.
On the prairies we're looking at 1,155,000 acres.
That's identical to 2013, just spread out a little bit different.

Davidson says with the crops covered by snow they should be well protected and if nothing strange, like a January thaw, happens they should do all right but it's a matter of now of waiting until spring.
For Farmscape.Ca, I'm Bruce Cochrane.


       *Farmscape is a presentation of Sask Pork and Manitoba Pork Council