The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

State News

June 5, 2007

Kansas: Wetness delays wheat harvest, threatens crop

The Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. — Excessive wetness across the central and southern Great Plains has delayed winter wheat harvest and threatened crop quality, the National Agricultural Statistics Service said Tuesday.

In its weekly weather bulletin, the agency reported that winter wheat heading across the middle Mississippi Valley and the southern half of the Great Plains was completed or near completion. Wheat crops were maturing at a normal pace in all wheat growing states — except for Kansas, Colorado and Montana.

The nation’s wheat harvest begins in the southern states and moves northward as crops mature. But NASS noted wheat harvest so far in Texas was 10 percent completed, compared with 25 percent at this time last year. In Oklahoma, harvest was just 3 percent complete, compared with 45 percent at this date a year ago.

The winter wheat harvest typically begins in early June in Kansas, with the Kiowa area historically the first place in the state to take in grain. The report noted no wheat has been harvested in Kansas.

At the OK Co-op Grain Co. elevator in Kiowa, general manager Alan Meyers said he expected wheat harvest in his area not to begin in earnest for at least another week and a half.

Meyers blamed the delay on last fall’s drought, saying much of the wheat planted then didn’t emerge until after the region got snow in February. That has thrown crop development back two or three weeks in many fields.

The Kiowa elevator has gotten only one test-cutting sample from a neighboring Oklahoma field that indicated the crop was dry enough to harvest, and Meyers said he expected only scattered, isolated loads to be brought in to the elevator in the coming days.

The latest crop update from the Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service showed just 36 percent of the wheat in Kansas has turned color. That compared with 75 percent last year and 58 percent for the five-year average for this late in the season.

The lateness in crop emergence in the Kiowa is expected to limit the size of its harvest, Meyers said.

“It is going to be pretty disappointing,” Meyers said of the upcoming wheat harvest.

Although the crop in southern Kansas was not as extensively damaged by the late-winter freeze as fields in the central part of the state, it has been plagued by problems this spring.

“It was hit by a little bit of freeze damage, a little bit of rust damage, a little bit of armyworm damage. Put all that together and you have a lot of wheat laying on the ground. ... We didn’t have too much freeze damage, but you put a little bit of that, a little bit of another and pretty soon you still have much of a mess,” he said.

On Monday, Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service rated 35 percent of the wheat statewide in poor to very poor condition. About 32 was listed as fair, with 25 percent rated as good and 8 percent excellent.

The report indicated armyworms were the predominant pest in Kansas, although 61 percent of the wheat showed no sign of any insect infestation, KASS reported. About 34 percent of the wheat showed no disease problems.

Text Only
State News
  • Lions climb into share of MIAA men's basketball lead

    Without taking the floor, Missouri Southern has climbed into a first-place tie in the MIAA men’s basketball race.

    February 22, 2012

  • 2.6 magnitude earthquake recorded in Oklahoma

    The U.S. Geological Survey has recorded a 2.6 magnitude earthquake near Wellston in central Oklahoma.
    No injuries or damage is reported.

    January 19, 2011

  • Audit: $108,000 taken from Missouri Veterans Commission JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A former employee of the state auditor’s office embezzled nearly $108,000 while working as an accountant for the Missouri Veterans Commission, the state auditor alleged Monday.

    Stacy Griffin-Lowery was fired by the Veterans Commission in March 2008 and pleaded guilty three months later to a misdemeanor theft charge. She repaid the state $17,665, the auditor’s office said.

    But Missouri Auditor Susan Montee on Monday accused Griffin-Lowery of swiping an additional $90,192 by getting reimbursed for cash advances and purchases made on her personal credit card.

    April 12, 2010

  • Race in Kansas’ 2nd District could heat up for GOP incumbent TOPEKA, Kan. — A conservative Kansas legislator said Monday he will announce in a few weeks whether he will challenge freshman U.S. Rep. Lynn Jenkins in the Republican primary.

    State Sen. Dennis Pyle’s actions in recent months suggest the Hiawatha farmer, who’s served in the Legislature since 2001, is running against Jenkins in the Aug. 2 primary. He set up a campaign organization in November and has a Web site featuring a brief video of him on his farm, asking viewers for support.

    April 12, 2010

  • Oklahoma tea party leaders, lawmakers envision militia OKLAHOMA CITY — Frustrated by recent political setbacks, tea party leaders and some conservative members of the Oklahoma Legislature say they would like to create a new volunteer militia to help defend against what they believe are improper federal infringements on state sovereignty.

    Tea party movement leaders say they’ve discussed the idea with several supportive lawmakers and hope to get legislation next year to recognize a new volunteer force

    April 12, 2010

  • Missouri: Senate panel cuts $500 million from proposed budget JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A Senate committee declared Thursday that it has sliced more than $500 million from Missouri’s proposed budget for next year — meeting a target set by Gov. Jay Nixon to bring it in balance.

    April 8, 2010

  • Kansas: Wichita-area casino in doubt after governor’s decision TOPEKA, Kan. — A proposed casino south of Wichita was in doubt Thursday after Gov. Mark Parkinson refused to grant its developers a regulatory reprieve. Partners in the $225 million Chisholm Creek project wanted to delay a state board’s decision on their plans.

    April 8, 2010

  • Oklahoma: Groups oppose education spending initiative OKLAHOMA CITY — A coalition of business and labor groups said Thursday it will work to defeat a ballot initiative to dramatically increase spending on public education that coalition members said would devastate the budgets of many other state services and possibly force tax increases.

    April 8, 2010

  • Missouri: Gov. Nixon affirms support for tuition freeze COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon has no plans to sit idly while lawmakers consider whether to preserve a tuition freeze deal he assembled before the state’s dire financial status was fully known.

    April 7, 2010

  • Kansas: Agency uses YouTube to illustrate road woes TOPEKA, Kan. — It’s one thing to hear about potholes and state budgets. It’s another to see how the two are connected. That’s part of the thinking behind a new video presentation on YouTube this week from the Kansas Department of Transportation.

    April 7, 2010