

“The protein is so high that you can’t use (it) for anything but cattle feed,” Kress said. Flour millers turn to Pacific Northwest soft white wheat for its low protein content, which is well-suited for pastries and crackers.īut the drought is shriveling wheat kernels and raising protein levels, making the some of the crop less valuable. On top of the expected yield losses, grain buyers worry about quality. A year ago, just 2% of the state’s winter wheat and 6% of its spring wheat were rated poor to very poor.

Agriculture Department this week rated 68% of the state’s spring wheat and 36% of its winter wheat in poor or very poor condition. “The Washington wheat crop is in pretty rough shape right now,” said Clark Neely, a Washington State University agronomist. exports of white wheat in the marketing year that ended May 31 reached a 40-year high of 265 million bushels, driven by unprecedented demand from China.īut farmers may not have as much to sell this year. You see your blood, sweat and tears just slowly wither away and die.” “Something about a drought like this just wears on you.

“The general mood among farmers in my area is as dire as I’ve ever seen it,” Kress said. variety is especially prized by Asian buyers. Other countries including Australia and Canada grow white wheat, but the U.S. The Pacific Northwest is the only part of the United States that grows soft white wheat used to make sponge cakes and noodles, and farmers were hoping to capitalize on high grain prices. The extreme weather is another blow to farmers who have struggled with labor shortages and higher transportation costs during the pandemic and may further fuel global food inflation.Ĭordell Kress, who farms in southeastern Idaho, expects his winter white wheat to produce about half as many bushels per acre as it does in a normal year when he begins to harvest next week, and he has already destroyed some of his withered canola and safflower oilseed crops. Pacific Northwest is damaging white wheat coveted by Asian buyers and forcing fruit farm workers to harvest in the middle of the night to salvage crops and avoid deadly heat. CHICAGO (Reuters) – An unprecedented heat wave and ongoing drought in the U.S.
