Well if you want winter wheat the best time to plant it is on the first day of winter and the best time to harvest it is the first of spring (20th march).
She was the greek goddess of the harvest and wheat
Winter-Harvest was created in 1966.
you harvest wheat, wheat is partly how you make bread,DUMB-ASS
wheat
WHEAT
Farmers would harvest wheat if it was the wheat season.
It means to produce two crops in one growing season. One example would be planting winter wheat in the autumn, then a crop of soybeans in the summer after the wheat is harvested and harvest those in the autumn.
Harvest in Provence, Wheat Harvest, Harvest Landscape, Potato Harvest are van Gogh paintings. Which one is your question about?
It depends on the type of wheat that was planted. There are two broad categories, "winter wheat" and "spring wheat". Winter wheat is planted in late fall so it can sprout to about 3 inches tall before snow falls. And then it comes back up early in the spring and is ready to be harvested mid summer (late July). Spring wheat is planted as early in the spring as your region will allow, and is usually harvested in late August to mid-September. The exact timing varies by geographical region. In either case you wait until the plants are golden yellow and the heads are drooping down before you try to test the grain for ripeness. The most reliable way to tell if the wheat is ready for harvest is to try to bite one of the grains. If it is soft and spongy, it is not dry enough and if you harvest it like that it will probably rot from too much moisture in the grain. If you bite a grain and it is hard and cracks between your teeth, it is ready to be harvested.
August
shock the wheat means harvest the wheat I guess and Wichita State is in wheat country