Slow start to seeding in Saskatchewan
MELFORT, Sask. – The first seeders hit the field in Saskatchewan last week, according to the Ministry of Agriculture’s crop report.
Crops Extension Specialist Matt Struthers said cool temperatures and early spring snowstorms have delayed seeding for many producers across the province. Currently, one per cent of the 2022 crop is now in the ground, well behind the five-year average of five per cent. Most of the activity is in the southern part of the province.
“The southwest is going full bore with their seeding,” Struthers told farmnewsNOW. “It sounds like they are on par with where they usually are every year so that’s good to see.”
Topsoil moisture for cropland is still less than ideal for proper seed germination and pasture growth. Cropland topsoil moisture is rated as five per cent surplus, 55 per cent adequate, 26 per cent short and 14 per cent very short.


