Corn, soybeans still good, but pasture struggling

Rain across most of the state resulted in 5.5 days suitable for fieldwork during the week ending August 28, 2022, according to the USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service. Fieldwork included harvesting corn for silage and cutting hay.

Topsoil moisture condition statewide rated 16 percent very short, 29 percent short, 53 percent adequate and 2 percent surplus. Despite recent rains, more than half of topsoil was considered short to very short on moisture in the northwest, west central, southwest, south central and southeast districts. Ratings in west central Iowa were 22 percent very short, 33 percent short, and 45 percent adequate.

Subsoil moisture condition across Iowa rated 20 percent very short, 33 percent short, 45 percent adequate and 2 percent surplus. Ratings in west central were 30 percent very short, 36 percent short, and 34 percent adequate.

Corn in the dough stage or beyond was 92 percent, three days behind last year but two days ahead of the 5-year average. Fifty-two percent of Iowa’s corn crop has reached the dent stage or beyond, four days behind last year. Three percent of the state’s corn crop was mature, 1 week behind last year and four days behind the 5-year average. Corn condition remained 66 percent good to excellent.

Ninety-five percent of soybeans were setting pods, six days behind last year but two days ahead of the average. Soybeans were coloring at 7 percent, five days behind last year and three days behind the 5-year average. Soybean condition rated 63 percent good to excellent.

Sixty-five percent of the state’s third cutting of alfalfa hay was complete. Pasture condition rated 31 percent good to excellent. Some pastures were still stressed from lack of precipitation.

 Weather Summary provided by Justin Glisan, Ph.D., state climatologist, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship – A continued active storm track brought widespread rainfall across Iowa during the reporting period; positive departures of two to three inches were found over a swath from the state’s southwest corner through northeastern Iowa. Temperatures were also near-seasonal to a few degrees warmer than normal with a statewide average of 71.6 degrees, 0.5 degree above normal.

A high pressure center parked over the Midwest brought pleasant conditions to Iowa with partly sunny skies and daytime temperatures in the mid 70s to low 80s through Sunday afternoon, Aug. 21. Winds were very light to calm overnight into Monday, leading to dense fog and heavy surface dew during the morning hours with lows in the mid to upper 50s. Partly cloudy skies persisted into the afternoon with variable winds and seasonal highs in the upper 70s and low 80s.

Clouds increased though the nighttime hours and into Tuesday, Aug. 23, as winds picked up in northwestern Iowa ahead of low pressure system. Southerly winds gradually built in with afternoon temperatures ranging from the upper 80s northwest to upper 70s northeast. Overnight lows cooled into the low to mid 60s as an isolated line of thundershowers pushed into northwestern Iowa early on Wednesday morning ahead of a cold front.

Winds swung around to a northerly direction as the front dropped south over Iowa through the afternoon, holding high temperatures in the upper 70s and low 80s north of the front; upper 80s and some low 90s were observed in southern Iowa. Isolated storms fired along the boundary into the evening, becoming more numerous in eastern Iowa after midnight. An additional wave formed in western Iowa just before sunrise but fizzled out during late Thursday morning, Aug. 25. Event rain totals were highest at eastern and southwestern stations with many locations reporting at least 0.20 inch; Red Oak (Montgomery County) measured 1.00 inch while Clinton (Clinton County) observed 2.08 inches.

Clouds hung around for most of the day with temperatures varying from the upper 70s northwest to mid-80s southeast. Foggy conditions formed in eastern Iowa early Friday as spotty showers redeveloped in the southwest with a handful of stations reporting minor totals. Clouds thinned through the day as southeasterly winds brought in more moisture ahead of the next disturbance to impact Iowa.

Temperatures remained warmer than average as the sun rose on Saturday, Aug. 27, with upper 60s and low 70s west and low to mid 60s east. A north-south oriented stationary front set up later in the muggy afternoon hours as highs pushed into the upper 80s and low 90s. Ample moisture flow into the atmospheric boundary forced sluggish thunderstorms with locally heavy rain rates from southwestern Iowa through central and northeastern Iowa. Initial storm development brought several severe-warned storms to eastern Iowa and then farther west before the cells consolidated into a widespread rain shield. The disturbance persisted past midnight as it slowly pushed east. Rainfall totals at 7 am showed more than 50 stations measuring at least an inch, 24 of which were at or above two inches across a narrow swath from Adams to Story County; most stations receiving rain had at least 0.40 inch with the statewide average coming in at 0.86 inch.  

Weekly precipitation totals ranged from no accumulation at several southeastern Iowa stations to 3.50 inches in Story City (Story County). The statewide weekly average precipitation was 0.95 inch while the normal is 0.97 inch. Osceola (Clarke County) reported the week’s high temperature of 93 degrees on Aug. 24, 10 degrees warmer than normal.  Anamosa (Jones County) reported the week’s low temperature of 50 degrees on Aug. 25, eight degrees below normal.

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