1 / 9

Montana Small Grain Guide

Montana Small Grain Guide. History of Grain Production in Montana. In the Beginning. Cereal Grains in 1860’s to feed mining boom towns 1870 = 831 farms and 150,000 acres of cultivated land

Download Presentation

Montana Small Grain Guide

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Montana Small Grain Guide History of Grain Production in Montana

  2. In the Beginning • Cereal Grains in 1860’s to feed mining boom towns • 1870 = 831 farms and 150,000 acres of cultivated land • Homestead Boom 1900’s spawned by: advent of “Dry-Farming” methods, low price machinery, and Great Northern Campaign

  3. Homesteaders • “Golden Triangle”, then the “Highline”, and “Eastern Mt” • 1910 Land Office processed 1000 to 1500 homestead filings per month • 13,000 farms in 1900 • 16,ooo farms in 1910 • 58,000 farms in 1920

  4. Good Wheat Conditions • 1909 - 1916 lots of well-timed rain averaging 16” per year • 1915 & 1916 yields ranged from 35-50 bushels per acre • World War I drove up prices • 1917 Lever Act set wheat prices to a $2 min

  5. Bad Conditions • 1919 - 1225 20% of farms in MT went out of production • drought • locusts • wind • $1.20 drop in price • 2.4 bu/acre average • 1/2 of all farmers lost their land • Land prices cut in half • MT only state to lose population in 1920’s

  6. Wheat & Barley • wheat cultivated as early as 15,000 B.C. • Hard red winter wheat “Turkey Red” brought to US by Russian Mennonite immigrants to Kansas in 1873 • Wheat brought to Montana from Utah in 1864 • 14,000 acres in 1874 • 100,000 acres in 1900 • 435,000 acres in 1910 • Marquis (spring wheat) from Canada in 1913 • 2 million acres in 1915 • 4.4 million acres in 1929

  7. Barley • originated in western Asia about 5,000 B.C. • introduced in the Colonies to be used for brewing • popular near large cities • Wheat allotments in 1954 made 1,000,000 acres in MT available for other uses, Barley was most attractive alternative • ranks 3rd in importance in MT

  8. Agriculture Today • by 1980’s, 60% of MT farmers have more than 20 years experience • Must balance levels of inputs to maximize PROFIT not yield

More Related