Does barley still stack up?

Steevo

Member
Location
Gloucestershire
Reading one market report yesterday, barley is currently trading at a £44/t discount to wheat.

Is anyone changing their barley acreage as a result, or are people hoping it will come back in time?

Personally we put everything we could last year into wheat, and will be doing likewise again this season. We will still grow a couple of fields of spring barley where it's rotationally/agronomically convenient.
 

Zippy768

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Dorset/Wilts
This is the dilemma I’m having . Barley is so far behind wheat ( feed), in monetary terms, but how much is the spread of harvest, straw and the ability to get stubble turnips planted early , worth ?
Will continue with WB where it's due. On the livestock front, straw is valuable and grain can go straight into our store ready for crimping. Nice to get a few acres cut and cleared early on.
But without OSR here anymore I dont need the early entry.
Very impressed with how our - unplanned increased area - of SB came off.
Thought everything would had clashed.

That said, I'm still hauling Barley bales off the fields 🙁
 

Clive

Staff Member
Moderator
Location
Lichfield
Reading one market report yesterday, barley is currently trading at a £44/t discount to wheat.

Is anyone changing their barley acreage as a result, or are people hoping it will come back in time?

Personally we put everything we could last year into wheat, and will be doing likewise again this season. We will still grow a couple of fields of spring barley where it's rotationally/agronomically convenient.


I'm planting barley for the first time in a decade ............................ don't follow the herd!
 

warksfarmer

Member
Arable Farmer
Reading one market report yesterday, barley is currently trading at a £44/t discount to wheat.

Is anyone changing their barley acreage as a result, or are people hoping it will come back in time?

Personally we put everything we could last year into wheat, and will be doing likewise again this season. We will still grow a couple of fields of spring barley where it's rotationally/agronomically convenient.

Not my favourite crop. It’s horrible to cut generally and it’s taken the combine 3 weeks to cut 500ac this year. Obviously weathers played a big part in that but even when cutting it’s a very slow job around 3.5km/hr. Anything faster and it’ll come over the back. Also you need to bank on loosing heads. Last year we lost 1/3 of the crop so timing is critical. I reckon the old saying of when you think barley is ready go on holiday for a week is a load of crap. When you think it’s ready cut it, even if there’s a bit of green because in a weeks time you’ll have heads on the floor.

It’s nigh on impossible to make malting on our soil so the feed market price and 3t/acre (normal year) isn’t exactly great.
That said it’s smoothers blackgrass and ryegrass out like nothing else, if you plant a big seed rate that is. Anywhere the germination isn’t great grass weeds will win. Get a good seed/soil contact and you’ve beaten the grass weeds before you start.
 

4course

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
north yorks
I would say this year having just cut 2 fields of sp barley the margin at current prices will be more than a fair % of our wheat crops more t/acre both grain and straw better price for barley straw 1/2 the growing costs the wb is even better ,but its the ww thats poor not the barley thats great
 

Brisel

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Midlands
I wouldn’t change policy based on current prices - last year wheat and barley were at parity for feed.

It is a useful crop as a second or third cereal when you consider the alternatives and straw. On lighter land second wheat isn’t an option and the early harvest of winters helps summer logistics.
 

Frodo

Member
Location
Scotland (east)
Reading one market report yesterday, barley is currently trading at a £44/t discount to wheat.

Is anyone changing their barley acreage as a result, or are people hoping it will come back in time?

Personally we put everything we could last year into wheat, and will be doing likewise again this season. We will still grow a couple of fields of spring barley where it's rotationally/agronomically convenient.
At £44t discount surely every nutritionist in the land is changing ration to max out barley, or is it not that simple?
 

Brisel

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Midlands
Merchants would say that wheat is too expensive...! Barley is competing with imported zero tariff maize in feed rations. There are limits of inclusion rates for pig and poultry rations but for ruminants anything goes in as long as the whole meets the spec for energy, protein etc.
 

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