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Worst U.S. drought holds its grip as growers pivot to wheat

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“It’s way too early to start talking about any impact on bread prices,” said Whitacre, who teaches at Illinois State University. “Wheat has a way of keep coming back, and it’s very common for the media to kill of a wheat crop three or four times before it’s actually harvested. It’s a pretty hardy crop.”

Wheat planting already was 91 percent done in Kansas, the nation’s top producer of the grain. Sixty-two percent of that state’s crop already has emerged from the ground as 77.8 percent of Kansas remained caught up in extreme or exceptional drought, according to Thursday’s update. Just 2 percent of that crop is rated in excellent condition, with 38 percent considered good, 49 percent fair and 11 percent poor to very poor.

Drought was posing similar troubles in Nebraska, where nearly all the winter wheat crop has been seeded but only 58 percent has emerged because of the dry soil. Typically, 87 percent of the crop has germinated there by now.

The pace of germination was down 31 percent in Montana and 16 percent in Colorado.

U.S. farmers this year harvested 2.2 billion bushels of wheat, a 13-percent rise from the 2 billion bushels of last year, according to the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service. Winter wheat accounted for much of this year’s production, with the 1.65 billion bushels of that crop eclipsing the 1.49 billion bushels grown last year.

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