Harvest Nearly Done On State’s 2024 Wheat Crop

BONNIE A. COBLENTZ

STARKVILLE, MISSISSIPPI

Wheat harvest was complete across most of the state by late June, wrapping up a crop that was quite small compared to recent years and in fairly average condition.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimated wheat harvest was 94% complete by June 23, well ahead of the 5-year average for harvest. Mississippi growers planted just 70,000 acres in 2023, and the crop has averaged 96,000 acres since 2021.

“Last year, we had an extremely dry fall,” said Erick Larson, Mississippi State University Extension Service grain crops agronomist. “Until nearly Thanksgiving time, fields were too dry to promote germination of wheat that was seeded. That drove growers to withhold planting many acres that they otherwise would have planted in wheat.”

Wheat is never a major crop in Mississippi, but it typically is grown on about 180,000 acres. This year’s wheat acreage was 40% down from that grown in 2023, and in keeping with a recent trend of very low acres.

Larson said growers must choose whether they want a summer crop or a winter crop, although some try to harvest in June and plant late soybeans, which is known as double cropping.

“Most of the summer crops are more profitable and have a more regular market available for them,” Larson said. “Wheat is a secondary crop, and some elevators may not be able to accommodate it or other secondary crops.”

Wheat is the primary winter grain crop option for Mississippi growers, so it continues to be produced in the state.

This year, once the crop received enough rain in the fall to germinate, there were few complications. The cold snap in January did no significant damage as the crop was dormant at that time.

“Wheat normally does better with dry conditions in April and May as it hits its stride and goes through heading stages and grain development,” Larson said. “The fact that we avoided a lot of soaking, flooding rains this spring helped the outlook of the acres we had.”

Disease issues were handled when necessary, and insect problems were minimal.

“The reduced acreage we’ve had over the past several years negated the chance of prevalent pests having a cumulative cycle effect,” Larson said. “If there’s a lot of wheat, then the pest populations often ramp up.

“The fact that wheat acreage is so scattered and inconsistent reduced problems and kept pests at not a particularly threatening level,” he said.

Wheat harvest begins in May each year, and Larson said most in the state was harvested between May 20 and June 15.

Will Maples, Extension agricultural economist, said wheat futures rallied to nearly $7 a bushel in May but shed all that gain in June to close at $5.61 per bushel on June 21.

“Much of the rally was fueled by concerns with the Russian wheat crop, but yields in Russia have risen higher than expected in recent weeks,” Maples said. “The U.S. wheat crop has also shown better than expected yields.”

He said wheat futures prices are higher than cash prices which were $5.44 per bushel June 24 in Greenville and $5.09 per bushel in Belzoni and Greenwood.

“Wheat prices are down significantly from the highs two years ago when the Ukraine/Russia War began and threw the markets into chaos,” Maples said.  ∆

BONNIE A. COBLENTZ: Mississippi State University

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