A strange Spring?

Flintstone

Member
Location
Berkshire
Ok, putting the Winter/Spring rainfall aside for a minute, is anyone else finding this a strange Spring?

The local Reading University soil and air temperatures (link below) have been well above seasonal average, but I’m finding everything to be so slow to get away this year. We are now into the third week of April now, and it’s almost like a dormant Spring, certainly for Spring crops.

There’s an area of grass I’ve regularly cut for my own recreational use for 30 years now, and I’ve only had to cut it once so far. Normally by now I’d have done at least four cuts, and it would be romping away weekly.

Trees seem ever so slow to come into blossom, and crops I drilled back in mid Feb seem to be sitting at the same growth stage, with little willingness to move, for weeks now!

I know it’s been ever so wet, but something else seems to be going on.

 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
Ok, putting the Winter/Spring rainfall aside for a minute, is anyone else finding this a strange Spring?

The local Reading University soil and air temperatures (link below) have been well above seasonal average, but I’m finding everything to be so slow to get away this year. We are now into the third week of April now, and it’s almost like a dormant Spring, certainly for Spring crops.

There’s an area of grass I’ve regularly cut for my own recreational use for 30 years now, and I’ve only had to cut it once so far. Normally by now I’d have done at least four cuts, and it would be romping away weekly.

Trees seem ever so slow to come into blossom, and crops I drilled back in mid Feb seem to be sitting at the same growth stage, with little willingness to move, for weeks now!

I know it’s been ever so wet, but something else seems to be going on.


yes - we are lucky to have well established winter wheat and barley here . - it’s had all inputs at the right timing m, barley had had all its N now and wheat has had 80% of its total yet it’s not really got moving at all yet

hot then cold / cloudy and changeable weather the reason i think
 

Spencer

Member
Location
North West
Was like January on Monday.. white over with hail! Not sown a grain yet but should get going this weekend. It’s a late spring, still cut the lawns 4 times now though 🤔
 

Punch

Member
Location
Warwickshire
Talking to an agronomist and stating our spring wheats been slow to get going and he reckoned all the rain has pushed the oxygen out the soils. That is then slowing root & shoot development.
I was just saying it’s the continual rain that’s keeping soils cold and slowing growth.
Not sure who’s right but it’s been in 3 weeks and only just coming!
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
variation in soil temps on our monitor, i think this explains a lot of it - and still hero b these cold night time temperatures

IMG_3796.png
IMG_3797.png
 

PSQ

Member
Arable Farmer
Talking to an agronomist and stating our spring wheats been slow to get going and he reckoned all the rain has pushed the oxygen out the soils. That is then slowing root & shoot development.
I was just saying it’s the continual rain that’s keeping soils cold and slowing growth.
Not sure who’s right but it’s been in 3 weeks and only just coming!
I had to look at your location, as I was talking to an agronomist from Northumberland yesterday who was saying exactly the same thing about lack of oxygen in the soil, but in winter wheat.
First wheats are still on the back foot from Atlantis and barely recovering, 2nd wheats were looking good but now thinning rapidly from the weather, but bizarrely 3rd wheats are thriving and looking lush like a forward 1st wheat should, it’s completely arse about tit.
OSR has finally started to sprint, apart from the 10 to 15% that’s been sat in saturated soil for 7 months stuck at a spindly 6” tall.
 

Punch

Member
Location
Warwickshire
I had to look at your location, as I was talking to an agronomist from Northumberland yesterday who was saying exactly the same thing about lack of oxygen in the soil, but in winter wheat.
First wheats are still on the back foot from Atlantis and barely recovering, 2nd wheats were looking good but now thinning rapidly from the weather, but bizarrely 3rd wheats are thriving and looking lush like a forward 1st wheat should, it’s completely arse about tit.
OSR has finally started to sprint, apart from the 10 to 15% that’s been sat in saturated soil for 7 months stuck at a spindly 6” tall.
Might be singing from same sheet.
Whether it’s location, soil type (clay it’s even in the field name!) or just the flipping amount of rain?
 

glasshouse

Member
Location
lothians
I had to look at your location, as I was talking to an agronomist from Northumberland yesterday who was saying exactly the same thing about lack of oxygen in the soil, but in winter wheat.
First wheats are still on the back foot from Atlantis and barely recovering, 2nd wheats were looking good but now thinning rapidly from the weather, but bizarrely 3rd wheats are thriving and looking lush like a forward 1st wheat should, it’s completely arse about tit.
OSR has finally started to sprint, apart from the 10 to 15% that’s been sat in saturated soil for 7 months stuck at a spindly 6” tall.
Get the ripper out, or the plough
 

Two Tone

Member
Mixed Farmer
Ok, putting the Winter/Spring rainfall aside for a minute, is anyone else finding this a strange Spring?

The local Reading University soil and air temperatures (link below) have been well above seasonal average, but I’m finding everything to be so slow to get away this year. We are now into the third week of April now, and it’s almost like a dormant Spring, certainly for Spring crops.

There’s an area of grass I’ve regularly cut for my own recreational use for 30 years now, and I’ve only had to cut it once so far. Normally by now I’d have done at least four cuts, and it would be romping away weekly.

Trees seem ever so slow to come into blossom, and crops I drilled back in mid Feb seem to be sitting at the same growth stage, with little willingness to move, for weeks now!

I know it’s been ever so wet, but something else seems to be going on.

I think the excessive wet is the cause. Light land isn’t so badly affected.
And my lawn will not stop growing!
 

PSQ

Member
Arable Farmer
Urea been on 7 weeks here and crops have barely moved , has the fert gone now ?
I could see where I'd run out of fert on wheat (N2, 2 weeks ago), so it's definitely taking it in.
Problem being theres been very little sunshine over the last few months, and theres diddly squat showing in the 10 day forecast.
It seems stuck on '99%' cloud cover, very similar to the shite spring of 2013 :dead:
 
Last edited:

SFI - What % were you taking out of production?

  • 0 %

    Votes: 107 40.2%
  • Up to 25%

    Votes: 98 36.8%
  • 25-50%

    Votes: 40 15.0%
  • 50-75%

    Votes: 5 1.9%
  • 75-100%

    Votes: 3 1.1%
  • 100% I’ve had enough of farming!

    Votes: 13 4.9%

May Event: The most profitable farm diversification strategy 2024 - Mobile Data Centres

  • 2,471
  • 49
With just a internet connection and a plug socket you too can join over 70 farms currently earning up to £1.27 ppkw ~ 201% ROI

Register Here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-mo...2024-mobile-data-centres-tickets-871045770347

Tuesday, May 21 · 10am - 2pm GMT+1

Location: Village Hotel Bury, Rochdale Road, Bury, BL9 7BQ

The Farming Forum has teamed up with the award winning hardware manufacturer Easy Compute to bring you an educational talk about how AI and blockchain technology is helping farmers to diversify their land.

Over the past 7 years, Easy Compute have been working with farmers, agricultural businesses, and renewable energy farms all across the UK to help turn leftover space into mini data centres. With...
Top