Thursday, July 9, 2026

This Week's Drought Summary (7/9)

Dry weather enveloped much of the western U.S. this week, with a few exceptions, leading to persistence or worsening of ongoing drought in the Northwest and in the Rocky Mountains in Wyoming and Colorado. Farther east, in the Great Plains, a mix of degradations, improvements or no changes to drought status or lack thereof occurred, as scattered hit-or-miss showers and thunderstorms moved across the Great Plains this week. Improvements were most prevalent in western Kansas and northeast Colorado, in parts of west Texas and southeast New Mexico and along the Missouri and Big Sioux Rivers in Nebraska and southeast South Dakota. Degradations occurred in parts of central and north-central Colorado, in north-central and northwest South Dakota and in parts of central and east-central Nebraska. This week’s rainfall and continued assessment of the impact of previous rains led to widespread improvements in Arkansas, northern Louisiana and portions of Kentucky and Tennessee. Heavy rains, locally exceeding 5 inches, drenched areas in central and northeast Iowa, southeast Minnesota and west-central Wisconsin, leading to widespread one- and isolated two-category improvements in areas where drought or abnormal dryness was ongoing. Short-term abnormal dryness emerged in parts of the Michigan Upper Peninsula and northeast Minnesota, and in areas just southeast of St. Louis after a drier-than-normal last couple of months. Heavy rains, locally exceeding 4 inches, drenched parts of the northern mid-Atlantic region, the New York City area and southern New England, leading to localized improvements. Ongoing groundwater shortages and long-term precipitation deficits somewhat tempered this week’s categorical improvements, though the rain improved the short-term picture in many areas. Similarly, localized heavy rains, in some places exceeding 5 inches, fell in the Florida Peninsula, locally improving conditions amid remaining low lake levels and longer-term precipitation shortfalls. Short-term dryness began to emerge again across parts of northern Georgia, the Carolinas and parts of adjacent Virginia, leading to low soil moisture and streamflow in areas already experiencing long-term dryness or drought. Recent very dry weather continued in much of Puerto Rico, leading to expansion of moderate drought and the expansion of severe drought along parts of the island’s southern coast. Short-term moderate drought also developed this week in northwest Alaska, while several areas of abnormal dryness developed or expanded.

Northeast

Temperatures in the Northeast were 6-9 degrees warmer than normal in most areas, with a few spots topping 9 degrees above normal. Widespread heavy rains fell in the New York City area, southern New England, southern New York, eastern Pennsylvania and portions of New Jersey. Rain amounts over 2 inches were common, and some locations saw rain amounts of 4-6 inches. Ongoing drought and abnormal dryness improved in parts of eastern Pennsylvania, southern West Virginia, New Jersey, southern New York and a few areas of Connecticut and Rhode Island where the heaviest rains occurred. Long-term precipitation deficits and groundwater shortages continued in many areas, so this week’s improvements were mostly limited to the areas where rainfall amounts were heaviest. Recent precipitation has also improved soil moisture in southern Maine, leading to the removal of moderate drought there, though the area has not yet caught up with long-term precipitation shortages.

Southeast

Warmer-than-normal temperatures occurred in the northern half of the Southeast this week, while the southern half was generally near normal. Temperatures in northern Georgia, northeast Alabama, parts of the Carolinas and Virginia were 3-9 degrees above normal. Isolated areas of at least 2 inches of rain occurred in parts of east-central Virginia and isolated parts of northern North Carolina. Widespread heavy rains, locally in excess of 5 inches, fell across parts of the Florida Peninsula. In the areas of North Carolina and Virginia that received more generous rain amounts, localized improvements occurred as precipitation deficits lessened and soil moisture increased. In northern Virginia, northern Georgia, and large parts of North Carolina and large areas of South Carolina, drier weather occurred amid warmer-than-normal temperatures. This resulted in widespread degradation in drought conditions in areas where soil moisture, streamflow and precipitation deficits in the short- and long-term worsened. Water restrictions and organized conservation efforts were occurring in several locations in Virginia and North Carolina. Heavy rain amounts in the Florida Peninsula alleviated short-term precipitation deficits and locally improved soil moisture and streamflow, leading to a few areas of improvement in ongoing long-term drought. Locally heavy rain in parts of the Florida Panhandle also led to local improvements.

South

Near- or warmer-than-normal temperatures covered most of the South this week. Rainfall amounts varied, with some areas staying completely dry, though amounts over 2 inches fell in parts of southern Arkansas, northern and southern Louisiana, central and western Tennessee, northeast Texas and a few parts of the Texas Panhandle and western Texas. Deficits in soil moisture and precipitation lessened in parts of far western Oklahoma, the Texas Panhandle and other areas of western Texas, leading to some improvements in ongoing drought. Likewise, long-term drought conditions were improved in portions of central Tennessee, aided by rains this week. A small area of severe drought developed in north-central Tennessee, where precipitation deficits grew and soils dried. Recent rainfall also improved soil moisture, streamflow and lessened precipitation shortages across much of northern and southeast Louisiana and central and southern Arkansas, leading to widespread improvements to drought or abnormal dryness. Isolated improvements also occurred in northwest Mississippi, though conditions across Mississippi were mostly stable as far as drought or dryness.

Midwest

Warmer-than-normal temperatures occurred across much of the Midwest this week, especially around the Great Lakes, where temperatures were mostly 6-12 degrees above normal. Heavy rains brought widespread amounts of 2-8 inches from portions of central and northern Iowa to southern Minnesota and central and west-central Wisconsin. Separately, heavy rains (mostly in the 2-6 inch range) fell west of Chicago eastward to southeast Michigan. Much of this rain fell in areas already free of drought or abnormal dryness, but some one-category improvements occurred northwest of Chicago, and one- and isolated two-category improvements occurred in northwest and north-central Iowa, southeast Minnesota and far western Wisconsin. Recent dry weather led to a few areas of abnormal dryness in the Michigan Upper Peninsula, northeast Minnesota and Isle Royale National Park, while similar recent dryness also led to expanding abnormal dryness and short- and long-term moderate drought south and southeast of St. Louis.

High Plains

Temperatures in the High Plains region were mostly near- or warmer-than-normal this week, with temperatures in eastern Nebraska and eastern South Dakota ranging from 3-6 degrees above normal. (Temperatures west of the Continental Divide were mostly below normal, though conditions in Wyoming and Colorado will be discussed in the West section.) Deficits in precipitation and soil moisture grew in parts of eastern Nebraska, where abnormal dryness and moderate drought expanded. North-central and western South Dakota also saw expansion of abnormal dryness and drought as short- and long-term precipitation deficits grew amid declining soil moisture and streamflow. Parts of central Colorado, especially near and east of Denver and Colorado Springs, saw conditions degrade this week as precipitation deficits grew. Similar conditions in north-central Colorado and south-central and northwest Wyoming, leading to degradations there. A small area of improvement occurred in north-central Wyoming, where vegetation conditions improved after recent precipitation. Scattered heavier rains fell in showers and thunderstorms that moved across parts of the Great Plains of northeast Colorado, the northern half of Kansas, parts of southwest and southeast Nebraska, and the Missouri and Big Sioux River corridors in South Dakota and northeast Nebraska. These rains locally improved drought or abnormally dry conditions.


West

Precipitation fell in portions of the Idaho-Montana border and across parts of southern and eastern Montana, and in a few areas of northwest Washington. Rainfall amounts around an inch fell in parts of New Mexico, though heavier amounts were mostly confined to east-central and southeast parts of the state, where conditions were re-assessed and local improvements occurred. Otherwise, much of the West region was dry this week. Conditions worsened in parts of central and southwest Colorado, where multiple large wildfires were occurring in areas of low soil moisture and large precipitation deficits. Degradations also occurred in parts of Oregon and adjacent far northern California and in north-central Washington. In these areas, streamflow levels remained low and precipitation deficits at both short- and long-term timescales grew. Water deliveries to properties near Bend, Oregon, were shut off this week as water supplies rain low. Widespread severe and extreme drought also continued in the eastern half of Nevada, Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, Utah and southern Idaho. Temperatures across the West region were mostly near- or cooler-than-normal, with temperature anomalies of 3-6 degrees below normal spreading across much of California, Nevada and parts of Arizona.


Caribbean

Short-term moderate and severe drought expanded this week in eastern and southern portions of Puerto Rico, and moderate drought expanded eastward to include the islands of Vieques and Culebra. Vegetation impacts increased amid short-term precipitation deficits and reduced streamflow. Rainfall was mostly below normal in Puerto Rico, while temperatures there ranged from mostly 1-3 degrees warmer than normal.

During much of the past drought week (Wed, Jul 1 - Tue, Jul 7, 2026), a typical summertime trade wind pattern persisted across Puerto Rico and the USVI. This featured a broad surface high pressure area over the central Atlantic which maintained moderate east-southeast winds. This pattern favored passing showers across the USVI and eastern Puerto Rico during the overnight and morning hours, followed by isolated afternoon showers over the interior and western sections of Puerto Rico. In addition, concentrations of Saharan dust produced hazy skies, reduced visibility, and degraded air quality. Persistent high-level cloudiness, warm surrounding waters, and continued onshore flow limited nighttime cooling, with many coastal areas seeing temperatures falling to only around 80-82 degrees. The lack of overnight relief, combined with a shallow increase in low-level moisture confined below 850 mb, resulted in higher humidity and dangerous heat indices.

The 7-day satellite-based precipitation estimates from NASA SPoRT/Imerg showed rainfall amounts under a half-inch, consistent with ground-based measurements. The amounts shown below are for individual stations and valid for the full 7-day period unless noted otherwise.

In St. Croix, sorted (from lowest to highest) individual station measurements include: Rohlsen Airport (#11624, a trace), VI-SC-20 (Frederiksted 1.7 ESE, 0.01-inch), VI-SC-09 (Christiansted 4.1 ESE, 0.03-inch, 5 days of data), East Hill (#672560, 0.08-inch), VI-SC-23 (Christiansted 6.5 W, 0.09-inch, 5 days of data), VI-SC-30 (Christiansted 1.7 SW, 0.17-inch), VI-SC-35 (Frederiksted 1.3 ENE, 0.21-inch, 4 days), VI-SC-25 (Christiansted 4.4 W, 0.25-inch, 6 days), VI-SC-10 (Christiansted 1.6 E, 0.32-inch), and VI-SC-29 (Frederiksted 2.5 NNE, 0.41-inch). The Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) values for Rohlsen Airport for 1-, 3-, and 6-months are, respectively, -3.40, -1.60, and -1.99 which suggests careful monitoring for further degradation in the near future. At East Hill, the SPI values at 1-, 3-, 6-, 9-, and 12-months are: -1.53, -1.23, -0.19, -0.90, and -0.39, which are more consistent with current D2-S conditions. The Adventure 28 Well experienced a gradual decline in water level, ranging from 23.07 feet to 23.55 feet below the ground surface.

At St. John’s, precipitation amounts ranged from 0.01-inch at VI-SJ-5 (Cruz Bay 1.6 E) to 0.03-inch at VI-SJ-10 (Cruz Bay 3.1 NNW) and at VI-SJ-3 (Windswept Beach). An observer at Windswept Beach noted “Dry and windy with lots of Saharan dust….but at least the wind and the ocean moderate the heat.” The SPI values at 1-, 3-, 6-, 9-, and 12 months at Windswept Beach are, respectively: -2.10, -1.37, -0.02, -1.13, and -0.19, which are generally consistent with St. John’s current D2-S drought designation. Well water levels at the Susannaberg Dpw-3 Well fell from 16.14 feet to 16.44 feet below the ground surface this week.

Dry conditions persisted at St. Thomas this week as well. Station VI-ST-15 (Charlotte Amalie West 1.3 N, 4 days of data) reported no rain, and King Airport (#11640) measured only a trace of rain this week. The King Airport SPI values at 1-, 3-, 6-, and 9-months were, respectively: -2.67, -2.52, -0.29, and -1.23, which emphasizes the heavily “front-loaded” (more recent) dryness. Provisional well water data from the USGS Grade School 3 Well featured a very slow downward trend in water level until the last day when it “tanked” significantly. The values ranged from 9.45 feet below the ground surface early in the week to 9.89 feet at week’s end.

Based on the recently observed precipitation amounts, provisional USGS well water levels, and latest SPI values, the drought designations at the three USVI stations remain at D2-S this week. One contributor towards the current drought situation is the presence of El Nino, which typically introduces enhanced westerly wind shear across the Caribbean Sea and tropical Atlantic. This increased shear is unfavorable for the formation of tropical cyclones, which usually bring significant rainfall to the northeastern Caribbean region in summer.

Pacific

Short-term moderate drought developed in the Lower Kobuk River Valley following continued drier-than-normal weather across large portions of the state this week. Abnormal dryness also expanded near the moderate drought. Low early summer rainfall amounts and only spotty recent rains led to abnormal dryness developing in portions of south-central Alaska. Cooler-than-normal temperatures occurred across most of Alaska this week, with most areas finishing the week 3-9 degrees below normal, with some locations finishing closer to normal.

Drier weather conditions continued this week on the leeward sides of the islands of Hawaii, though streamflow conditions and precipitation amounts are close enough to normal in most areas that conditions have not yet worsened. Abnormal dryness continued this week in parts of the north-central Big Island and in portions of central Maui. Temperatures in Hawaii this week were mostly either near normal or a degree or two above normal.

The big news item this week for the western North Pacific is Super Typhoon 09W (Bavi). It began as a tropical depression in the vicinity of the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) early in the drought week, and underwent rapid intensification on July 3. It was accompanied by the emergence of a well-defined eye and central dense overcast. On July 4, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) in Pearl Harbor upgraded Bavi to a (Category 5-equivalent) super typhoon, with estimated 1-minute winds of 165 mph. After a partial eyewall replacement cycle, Bavi’s sustained winds further increased to 180 mph. The eye of the super typhoon passed extremely close to the north side of Rota (in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands) becoming one of the strongest typhoons to affect the island. By Monday, July 6, the storm center was located about 165 nautical miles northwest of Andersen AFB (Guam) as it slowly receded from the region. Guam International Airport measured 12.31 inches of rain as of 4pm (July 6), a new daily record.

The satellite-based precipitation estimate map (for the week ending 12z July 7, 2026) showcased well-defined elongated banding across the USAPI domain north of the equator, associated largely with what was Super Typhoon 09W (Bavi). The primary rain concentration associated with Bavi (<8 inches) extends from about 136E to 160E and is approximately bounded by 10N and 17N latitude. This encompasses a huge portion of the USAPI domain north of the equator. Over the South Pacific, the light rainfall amounts depicted on the 7-day IMERG imagery are quite low (<0.5-inch), compared to the ground-based observations that run from 2.72 inches to 4.60 inches. Given the lack of available data and other information regarding this situation it is difficult to say why this is the case, other than convective rainfall may have been very localized and happened to fall near and over the monitoring stations.

There are no dryness nor drought designations anywhere in the monitored locations across the U.S. Affiliated Pacific Islands.

It has been a very wet week for Guam and parts of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) thanks to Super Typhoon Bavi. According to available preliminary data, Dededo (the largest and most populous village on the island of Guam) received the lion’s share of the torrential rainfall, with 13.02 inches reported on July 6, and 17.22 inches for the weekly total. The Guam International Airport reported 12.64 inches of precipitation on July 6th alone, and 16.78 inches for the week. Each month since last August (2025) has registered “wet”, meaning the reception of at least 4-inches of rain (the minimum monthly amount needed to meet most water needs). Other available rain gauge data included Agat (5.87 inches, 5 days of data), Saipan (2.82 inches, 6 days of data), and Rota Airport (0.65-inch, 5 days). These rainfall amounts may be significantly underdone and are considered very preliminary, as some of the gauges may have been damaged during the passage of Bavi.

In the Republic of Palau, a “wet” week was observed, with both reporting stations exceeding the weekly minimum rainfall of 2 inches. WSO Palau (Airai) reported 3.20 inches (6 days of data), and Koror measured 2.06 inches of precipitation (6 days of data), according to xmACIS2 data.

Over the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), precipitation amounts ranged from a maximum of 5.63 inches (6 days of data) at Pohnpei to a minimum of 0.09-inch (5-days) at Woleai. Intermediate values included 2.12 inches at Chuuk, 1.95 inches at Lukunoch, 1.63 inches at Yap Island, 1.50 inches (5 days) at Kosrae, 0.84-inch (6 days) at Kapingamarangi, 0.44-inch (6 days) at North Fanif, and 0.42-inch (6 days) at Nukuoro. Therefore, only two stations (Pohnpei and Chuuk) surpassed the 2-inch minimum requirement for weekly rainfall. A number of other stations (Rumung, Gilman, Ulithi, Fananu, and Pingelap) did not have enough data this week to do a proper analysis.

Precipitation amounts across the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) ranged from 3.08 inches at Kwajalein down to 0.48-inch at Mili. Intermediate values included 2.51 inches of rain at Ailinglaplap, 1.23 inches at Wotje, 1.18 inches at Majuro, 0.89-inch at Utirik, and 0.57-inch at Jaluit. In terms of recent wetness, Kwajalein has been “wet” (8-inches or more for the month) for the last three consecutive months (April through June), Ailinglaplap has been “wet” since February 2026, Jaluit from January through May 2026, and with one exception Majuro has been wet every month since last August (2025). The exception was February 2026, when 6.72 inches of precipitation was recorded.

In the South Pacific, the three reporting sites on the island of Tutuila in American Samoa exceeded the 2-inch minimum weekly rainfall amount. Siufaga Ridge received the most precipitation this past drought week with 4.61 inches reported, Toa Ridge measured 2.97 inches, and Pago Pago came in with 2.72 inches of rain (with only 2 days of data available).

Looking Ahead

Through the evening of Monday, July 13, the National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center’s precipitation forecast shows mostly dry weather west of the Continental Divide, with rain amounts over 0.5 inches in southeast Arizona and in some areas near the southern New Mexico-Arizona state line. Mostly dry weather is also likely in the northern and southern Great Plains, though parts of the central Great Plains, especially in the southern half of Nebraska and northern half of Kansas, may receive rain amounts locally over an inch or higher. Rainfall amounts near or over an inch are expected in parts of the Southeast, Mid-Atlantic, Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas, plus portions of Missouri. Heavier rain amounts ranging from 1.5-3 inches are forecast from southern Illinois eastward through southern Indiana, Kentucky, eastern Tennessee and parts of West Virginia. Isolated rainfall totals at or above 0.75 inches are possible from Iowa eastward through the lower Great Lakes, though most areas should stay drier. Primarily dry weather is forecast in New England, especially in the southern half of the region.

For July 14-18, the National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center forecast favors drier-than-normal weather across the Great Lakes and central and northern Great Plains. Drier weather is also favored in far southern Florida. Wetter-than-normal weather is favored mostly across the Gulf Coast states and Carolinas, and in parts of the Desert Southwest, especially in southern Arizona. Hotter-than-normal weather is very likely across the northern Great Plains and West, and in the Florida Peninsula. Warmer-than-normal weather is also favored, though at lesser confidence, across most of the rest of the contiguous U.S., with a few exceptions. The forecast favors near-normal temperatures in southwest Texas and southeast New Mexico and in the eastern Great Lakes and most of the Northeast. Northern Maine is slightly favored to see cooler-than-normal temperatures.

The forecast in most of Alaska favors cooler-than-normal temperatures, except for the far northeast portion of the state and in the central and western Aleutian Islands, where temperatures near- and above-normal are favored, respectively. Above-normal precipitation is favored across most of Alaska, aside from a small part of northeast Alaska and the central Aleutian Islands.





Tuesday, July 7, 2026

High Input-Cost Concerns Continue to Weigh on Farmer Sentiment

Farmer sentiment dropped again in June as the Purdue University-CME Group Ag Economy Barometer (AEB) Index declined from 119 points in May to 113 points in June. The Index of Current Conditions fell by 5 points, while the Index of Future Expectations fell by 7 points. June’s Current Conditions Index was 26 points below its December 2025 reading, reaching its lowest level since December 2024. The percentage of respondents who listed high input costs as their biggest concern was 47% in June, with the concern about low crop and livestock prices at 23% coming in as a distant second. In a related question, 42% of respondents indicated that high input costs are limiting improvements in their financial position this year. The June barometer survey was conducted among 400 farmers across the country from June 15 to 19, 2026.


Only 12% of respondents indicated that their farm operations were better off in June than they had been a year ago. Looking ahead to the next 12 months, 22% of respondents expect their farms to be better off financially a year from now. The Farm Capital Investment Index fell 1 point to 40, its lowest level since September 2024.

As in last month’s survey, the June survey asked farmers to identify the main factor limiting improvement in their farm’s financial situation. High input costs were by far the most frequently cited constraint, selected by 42% of respondents. Low output prices ranked second at 17%, followed by weather risk at 14%, policy uncertainty at 11%, labor and equipment concerns at 9%, and debt or financial pressure at 8%.

This month’s survey included two questions related to the use of artificial intelligence (AI) or data-driven tools in agriculture. The first question asked survey respondents what they viewed as the main benefit of using these tools. Approximately 23% of respondents indicated that an increase in production would be the main benefit. Reducing labor and reducing risk or uncertainty were chosen by 14% and 11% of respondents, respectively. Meanwhile, 52% of respondents said they did not see a meaningful benefit. A second question asked whether recommendations arising from data-driven tools would be difficult to follow. Approximately 63% of respondents indicated that recommendations would be sometimes difficult to follow, while 22% indicated that recommendations would often be difficult to follow.

This month’s survey also examined agricultural exports and attitudes toward free trade. Approximately 43% of respondents expected agricultural exports to increase over the next five years, while only 9% expected agricultural exports to decline. Respondents were also asked how strongly they agreed or disagreed with the following statement: “Free trade benefits agriculture and most other American industries.” Nearly 85% agreed or strongly agreed with this statement.

The Short-Term Farmland Value Expectations Index declined from 130 in May to 124 in June, while the long-term index increased to 166, tying its record high. Alternative investments, net farm income, and inflation were cited as the three factors with the greatest influence on farmland values.

Since July 2025, producers have been asked whether they think the U.S. is headed in the “right direction” or on the “wrong track.” After averaging 71% over the last six months of 2025, the percentage of producers who reported that the U.S. was headed in the “right direction” was 52% in May and 53% in June.

Wrapping Up

Farmer sentiment decreased from 119 in May to 113 in June, with declines in sentiment regarding both current conditions and future expectations. The percentage of producers who expected good times over the next five years was 32% in June, which is 17 percentage points lower than in the June 2025 survey results. There continued to be a large disparity in expectations between crop and livestock producers. Approximately 25% of respondents expected good times for crop producers, while 68% expected good times for livestock producers.

Input costs remained a top concern, with high input costs identified as the most important factor limiting improvements in financial performance. Despite concerns about the future, respondents remained optimistic regarding both short-term and long-term land values.




Idaho And Western United States SNOTEL Water Year (Oct 1) to Date Precipitation % of Normal (7/7)









Monday, July 6, 2026

USDA Weekly Crop Progress Report - Corn Rated 67% Good to Excellent; Soybeans 64% Good to Excellent as of July 5

OMAHA (DTN) -- U.S. corn good-to-excellent condition ratings were unchanged while soybean good-to-excellent condition ratings declined from the previous week, according to USDA NASS's weekly Crop Progress report released Monday.

After a week of extreme heat followed by widespread rain and thunderstorms, weather conditions are shifting toward milder temperatures and continued precipitation across much of the Corn Belt, according to DTN Ag Meteorologist John Baranick.

CORN

-- Crop development: Corn silking was pegged at 16%, 1 percentage point behind last year's 17% and 2 percentage points ahead of the five-year average of 14%. Corn in the dough stage was estimated at 3%, steady with last year and slightly ahead of the five-year average of 2%.

-- Crop condition: NASS estimated that 67% of the crop was in good-to-excellent condition, steady with the previous week and 7 points below last year's 74%. Eight percent of the crop was rated very poor to poor, steady with the previous week and 3 points above the previous year's 5%. DTN Lead Analyst Rhett Montgomery noted that top-producing state Iowa remained a leader at 78% good to excellent, while second-ranked Illinois saw its good-to-excellent rating fall again to 58%/

SOYBEANS

-- Crop development: Soybeans blooming was pegged at 34%, 4 points ahead of last year's 30% and 6 points ahead of the five-year average of 28%. Soybeans setting pods were estimated at 9%, 2 points ahead of last year's 7% and 3 points ahead of the five-year average of 6%.

-- Crop condition: NASS estimated that 64% of soybeans that had emerged were in good-to-excellent condition, 1 point below the previous week of 65% and 2 points below the previous year of 66%. North Dakota and Michigan posted the largest weekly declines, with each state's good-to-excellent rating falling 10 percentage points, while top-producing Illinois saw its ratings improve, Montgomery said.

WINTER WHEAT

-- Harvest progress: Harvest moved ahead 11 percentage points last week to reach 59% complete nationwide as of Sunday. That was 8 points ahead of last year and the five-year average of 51%. Kansas' winter wheat was 91% harvested, Indiana was 61% and Oklahoma was 98%. Despite USDA forecasting the smallest U.S. winter wheat crop in 61 years, harvest remains ahead of the average pace for early July, Montgomery said.

-- Crop condition: An estimated 26% of winter wheat was rated good to excellent as of July 5, steady with the previous week and 22 points below 48% a year ago, according to NASS.

SPRING WHEAT

-- Crop development: Fifty-four percent of spring wheat was headed, 4 points behind last year's pace of 58% and steady with the five-year average.

-- Crop condition: NASS estimated that 57% of the crop was in good-to-excellent condition nationwide, down 2 points from 59% the previous week.

THE WEEK AHEAD IN WEATHER

An active weather pattern featuring scattered showers, thunderstorms and milder temperatures is expected to continue across much of the country this week, according to DTN Ag Meteorologist John Baranick.

"Last week's heatwave ended with a lot of widespread rain and thunderstorms across the country.," Baranick said. "Either due to the heat or some flooding and storm damage, there could be a drop in ratings this week. However, in the long run, I think the widespread moisture we saw will go further as we see more corn and soybeans head into pollination over the next couple of weeks. And the rain won't really stop this week, either.

"Last weekend's storm system has settled into the South and Southeast and will be producing scattered showers and thunderstorms for the first half of the week, which may include some areas of the southern Midwest as well. In addition, a front moving through the Northern Plains will move into the Upper Midwest on Monday, and slow-walk across the northern tier of the country through Thursday, producing showers and thunderstorms as it does. At the end of the week, we are expecting another little system to form on that front and move showers across central and southern areas of the country through the weekend. Though we won't see rain everywhere, all areas east of the Rockies have at least a chance for rain this week. Meanwhile, temperatures will be a bit milder than last week for just about everywhere as well. It will still feel like summer with a lot of 80s and lower 90s, but the extreme heat will be limited mostly to far southern areas this week."


National Crop Progress Summary
This Last Last 5-Year
Week Week Year Avg.
Corn silking 16 9 17 14
Corn dough 3 NA 3 2
Soybeans blooming 34 19 30 28
Soybeans setting pods 9 4 7 6
Winter wheat harvested 59 48 51 51
Spring wheat headed 54 32 58 54
Cotton squaring 49 37 47 47
Cotton setting bolls 14 9 13 14
Sorghum planted 97 91 95 96
Sorghum headed 25 19 21 22
Oats headed 86 74 83 81
Barley headed 60 39 51 52
Rice headed 26 19 24 22
Peanuts pegging 51 38 53 51

**

National Crop Condition Summary
(VP=Very Poor; P=Poor; F=Fair; G=Good; E=Excellent)
VP P F G E
Corn
This Week 2 6 25 53 14
Prev Week 2 6 25 53 14
Prev Year 1 4 21 57 17
DTN 5-Yr Avg 5 10 26 46 13
Soybeans
This Week 2 6 28 53 11
Prev Week 2 6 27 55 10
Prev Year 2 5 27 54 12
DTN 5-Yr Avg 4 10 28 47 11
Spring Wheat
This Week 1 6 36 52 5
Prev Week 1 6 34 55 4
Prev Year 3 12 35 45 5
DTN 5-Yr Avg 8 16 29 40 7
Winter Wheat
This Week 20 27 27 22 4
Prev Week 21 26 27 22 4
Prev Year 6 12 34 41 7
DTN 5-Yr Avg 14 18 31 32 6
Rice
This Week 1 3 22 54 20
Prev Week 1 3 22 56 18
Prev Year 1 2 23 52 22
DTN 5-Yr Avg 1 3 22 58 17
Oats
This Week 7 12 28 45 8
Prev Week 8 13 27 45 7
Prev Year 6 9 25 51 9
DTN 5-Yr Avg 7 9 30 48 6
Barley
This Week 1 7 40 49 3
Prev Week 1 7 40 49 3
Prev Year 1 14 43 40 2
DTN 5-Yr Avg 1 7 39 48 4
Peanuts
This Week 1 6 34 54 5
Prev Week 2 6 30 56 6
Prev Year 0 3 22 64 11
DTN 5-Yr Avg 2 8 32 51 7
Cotton
This Week 5 11 38 39 7
Prev Week 4 12 36 41 7
Prev Year 6 11 31 45 7
DTN 5-Yr Avg 12 17 30 34 6




This Week's Drought Summary (7/9)

Dry weather enveloped much of the western U.S. this week, with a few exceptions, leading to persistence or worsening of ongoing drought in t...