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    You are at:Home»State News»Heavy May rains delaying Kansas wheat harvest

    Heavy May rains delaying Kansas wheat harvest

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    By KMAN Staff on June 21, 2019 State News
    FILE - In this June 15, 2018, file photo, winter wheat stands ready to by harvested in a field near McCracken, Kan. The World Trade Organization handed the United States a win Thursday, April 18, 2019, in a trade dispute with China, ruling that Beijing did not fairly administer quotas on U.S. wheat, rice and corn. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)

    Heavy rains and flooding that inundated Kansas in May and early June are slowing down the state’s wheat harvest.

    The Wichita Eagle reports the wheat harvest usually starts between early and mid-June and wraps up by mid-July. But the Kansas Wheat Commission says only 1% of the state’s wheat crop was harvested as of Sunday. Typically, about 12% of the crop is harvested by this time, and last year 20% was harvested by mid-June.

    The delay comes after the state got 10.26 inches of rain in May, more than double the 30-year average of 4.12 inches. It was the wettest May ever recorded in Kansas.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture says only 21 percent of Kansas’ wheat crop is mature, compared with almost 60 percent at this time last year.

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