Winter warm-up welcome, but not enough snow to help with soil moisture
A mid-winter warm-up across southern Saskatchewan is bringing a break from bitter cold, but a corporate agronomist say it won’t do much to improve soil moisture – especially in areas that went into freeze-up dry and have seen little snow since.
Blake Weiseth, a corporate agronomist with Western Ag, said farmers should take the warm temperatures as a generally positive change, but not mistake it for meaningful moisture recovery.
“If you had dry conditions going into the fall and maybe little snow now, certainly some concern about drought conditions persisting into the spring,” Weiseth said.
He pointed to the Canadian Drought Monitor, produced by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, which he said showed parts of southwest Saskatchewan rated as abnormally dry, while west-central Saskatchewan was listed in moderate drought on the map produced Dec. 31, 2025.


