Frost takes greater toll on mustard crops than dryness

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: June 27, 2015

,

Brown mustard. (Peggy Greb photo courtesy ARS/USDA)

CNS Canada — Freezing temperatures at the end of May took a toll on Saskatchewan’s mustard crops, industry specialists say.

Walter Dyck, seed division manager for Olds Products, said many growers have reduced acreage this year.

“We had early seeding, but the frost — not just one frost, but many frosts had an impact this year on mustard,” he said.

Growers who experienced significant losses seeded barley, as it was too late and too dry to reseed mustard.

Richard Marleau, chair of the Saskatchewan Mustard Development Commission, said growers with straw on their crops had fewer issues with frost.

Read Also

While the bulk of Japan’s canola imports come from Canada, the supplier’s share has dropped from about 96 per cent of Japan’s imports to around 83 per cent. Australia has remained a major source of canola for Japan.
Photo: Canola Council of Canada

India, Japan canola crops to be steady in 2026/27 – USDA

Canola supplies for India and Japan are expected to remain relatively stable in the 2026/27 crop year, the United States Department of Agriculture said.

“I think they’ll usually fare better because the soil stays warmer, doesn’t cool off as much in those areas,” he said.

Canada doesn’t have a lot of carryover in mustard, and combined with this year’s lower production, mustard prices should move up, Dyck said.

However, he said, prices heavily depend on Europe, which produces its own mustard in eastern areas.

“They don’t always have a need to buy seeds in quantity from Canada,” said Dyck.

But if Europe experienced lower production, mustard prices would move higher.

Neither Dyck nor Marleau see Saskatchewan’s dryness as a pressing issue for mustard crops at this point.

“I think producers are really quite resilient with regards to the dry conditions, it’s just a matter of getting a shower or getting something,” Dyck said.

Marleau, who lives at Saskatoon but farms at Aneroid, Sask., southeast of Swift Current, has already seen some rain on his crops.

That area of southwestern Saskatchewan “has been fortunate enough to get a rain, got some reserve moisture,” he said. “Crops are looking not too bad.”

Jade Markus writes for Commodity News Service Canada, a Winnipeg company specializing in grain and commodity market reporting.

 

explore

Stories from our other publications