Condition ratings bore that out, worsening everywhere save slight bumps in Montana and in Kansas, where beneficial April rain fell across its central cropping districts. Good-to-excellent ratings as of April 16 were 14% in Kansas (13% a week earlier), 13% in Oklahoma (20%), 16% in Texas (17%), 23% in Colorado (25%), 21% in Nebraska (23%), 24% in South Dakota (29%) and 31% in Montana (30%).

“Salina, McPherson, Hutchinson, Wichita, wheat surrounding those cities looks like it still has potential,” Gilpin said.

Up north, seeding officially began by the second week of April. It remains to be seen how long that window will take to open wide as producers across a huge portion of North Dakota watch the snow melt following a late shift to warmer spring temperatures, pray it melts incrementally enough to avoid flooding, and await fields to dry enough to bring in heavy equipment.

“There’s concern out there about spring wheat planting lagging, but it’s still awful early yet to see how that acreage situation will play out,” Gilpin said, “but the fact that hard red winter wheat is going to have a short production year will put some pressure on spring wheat production and draw more attention to spring wheat plantings, conditions and ultimate harvest this year for total US balance sheets.”