Manitoba crops decline moving west: CWB tour

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: July 22, 2015

,

Brandon, Man. — As this year’s CWB crop tour moves west through Manitoba, crops have started looking thinner as the area has been drier than in the eastern part of the province..

Canola around Killarney doesn’t look good compared to its eastern Manitoba counterparts. Canola in western Manitoba is still flowering. The later bloom is likely due to reseeding, say farmers on the tour.

One wheat crop around Boissevain looked better than others in the area, but signs of fusarium head blight could be seen on some plants.

Read Also

The Diverse Field Crops Cluster is a research project examining how to improve crop production while limiting nitrogen emissions. Crops such as camelina, carinata, flax (seen here), sunflower and mustard are the focus area of the project.  Photo: Greg Berg

Manitoba Crop Report: More scattered rains across the province

More scattered showers across Manitoba helped crops advance in their development during the week ended July 13, 2025.

Signs of chemical damage, likely from glyphosate, were also seen on the crops in the field as well, said Chris Birk, a farmer and tour guide with the CWB.

“Not enough to kill it but enough to make it sick,” Birk says.

But good news for crops in the area as a light rain started coming down on Tuesday, which will help out the crops.

The CWB crop tour will leave Brandon and moving toward Saskatchewan on Wednesday.

Similar CWB-run tours are taking place in Alberta and Saskatchewan. All groups will be meeting for a conference in Regina on Friday to discuss the western Canadian crop.

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications