Amount of winter wheat area in drought unchanged

Dry/drought conditions in HRW get worse

National Drought Monitor Map, January 27, 2022
National Drought Monitor Map, January 27, 2022

The amount of winter wheat considered in drought conditions remained steady at 68% for the week that ended Jan. 25, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. USDA said winter wheat drought was 25% “moderate,” 23% “severe,” 18% “extreme,” and 2% “exceptional.” Last week, USDA said winter wheat drought was 27% “moderate,” 22% “severe,” 17% “extreme,” and 2% “exceptional.”

In the HRW area, dry/drought conditions continue to get worse. The amount of land in Nebraska considered abnormally dry/drought increased nine percentage points to 91%. Kansas had a five-point increase in the area considered abnormally dry/drought to 86%. Oklahoma had a one-point gain to have 96% of its area considered abnormally dry/drought. The amount of land classified as abnormally dry/drought in Texas (96%), Montana (92%), Colorado (100%), Nebraska (82%) and South Dakota (78%) was unchanged.

There was some improvement in abnormally dry/drought conditions in the SRW area. North Carolina had a 23-point decline to have 60% of its area considered abnormally dry/drought. Missouri has 40% of its area considered abnormally dry/drought, up two percentage points from the previous week. Illinois had an 11-point increase in the area considered abnormally dry/drought to 26%. Michigan, Indiana, Ohio and Arkansas had the same percentage of areas considered abnormally dry/drought as the previous week.