Disease pressure hampers valley; Klamath Basin suffers water
woes
By
MITCH LIES
Capital
Press
With dryland wheat yields hitting 90 bushels an acre
and some irrigated wheat topping 160 bushels, Eastern Oregon growers are
beaming over the 2010 wheat crop.
And then there's the price.
Wheat prices shot up recently after Russia announced
it was halting all wheat exports due to its poor crop.
"I fully expected $4 wheat, and it looks like we're
going to average $6," Sherman County wheat grower Darren Padget said.
"It's good to be wrong."
Other than some poor yields in the Willamette Valley
and a spotty outlook in the Klamath Basin, the 2010 wheat crop is coming
up roses for Oregon growers.
Oregon State University cereals specialist Mike
Flowers estimated yields as high as 20 percent above average in some
Eastern Oregon acreage, where the bulk of Oregon's crop originates.
"The cooler weather really helped them a lot," he
said.
"In a dryland region like Eastern Oregon, the moisture
from mother nature truly was a blessing," Oregon Wheat Growers League
Executive Director Tammy Dennee said.
Padget estimated dryland yields in the Wasco area were
averaging in the 60-bushel range.
"I think we all had visions of a little more grain,
with as much rain as we had, but we're satisfied," he said.
Some growers reported hitting 90 bushels, he said, a
yield rare among dryland growers.
Larry Price, a Malheur County wheat grower, was
calling the crop one of the best he's ever seen.
Price averaged about 150 bushels on his irrigated
acreage, with highs coming in over 160 bushels.
"Only one other time I saw some 165 bushel wheat,"
Price said.
Cool temperatures in June helped fill out the crop, he
said.
"We had 20 days in June where the temperature didn't
get over 70 (degrees Fahrenheit), and all the lower canopy tillers
filled out real well," Price said. "That's where all the additional
yield was."
In the Klamath Basin, where growers this week were
preparing to launch their harvest season, uncertainties over water
delivery contributed to some delayed planting and uneven irrigation --
uncertainties that are contributing to varied yields.
"It's mixed," Klamath Basin grower Mike Noonan said of
the Klamath yields. "Some crops look good. Some have been really hurt."
Yields were down slightly in the Willamette Valley,
where rainy, cool conditions in the spring contributed to heavy disease
pressure.
"We're about 5 to 10 percent less than what we would
have hoped for without the stripe rust pressure," Flowers said.
Especially in the northern end of the valley, growers
suffered yield loss to diseases, he said.
"The growers that got out there, treated and got the
disease under control did pretty well," Marion County Extension agent
Tom Silberstein said. "But in some cases, weather conditions prevented
people from treating when they needed to."
Flowers estimated as many as 200,000 acres were
planted to wheat in the valley, 6 to 7 times more than in a typical
year.
Statewide, Flowers said, Oregon growers planted just
under 1 million acres.
"The challenge now is storage," the wheat league's
Dennee said. "We don't normally have this volume."
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