[Feb. 10th pic] This pic (from the yellowish field) shows a very wet root ball. I could not remove the dirt for a decent pic of the root structure. The roots were bunched with few roots extending deeper into the profile. If you enlarge this pic, and compare with the one below, you can detect more yellowing of the plant leaves associated with oxygen deprivation compared to the pic below.
How this condition will effect overall yield compared to the crop in the pic below will be hard to assess because of so many variables inherent with two different operations and the weather from now to harvest. An example, --two recent events of very cold nights, one on April 13th @ 10ºF and the other April 17th @ 19ºF, and since then, many mornings with temps in the mid to upper 20's. When scouting on April 14th, the crop in the pic above was not jointing, while the crop in the pic below was jointing. The seed head associated with jointing could be vulnerable to freeze damage. During these events, the younger crop was showing serious leaf damage with color change and laying flat to the ground, while the older crop showed no leaf damage. Symptoms of cold damage in the area were reported as related to cultivar type, and plant size.
[Feb. 10th pic] This plant shown on the left is from the crop in the foreground of the pic at the top (dark green). The roots are quite damp but I was able to knock the dirt ball loose, exposing the root structure. The roots extended deep into the profile with no root mass near the crown of the plant. It was obvious the moisture was draining more quickly into the profile.
There is one more point related to water infiltration that I want to make, --that is, comparing the conventional fallow based system (the three pic's above), too a bordering field with a long history of direct seeding shown in the pic below.
[Feb. 10th pic]
The pic on the left shows winter wheat growing in a long term ultra-low disturbance direct seed field with surface armor well above the 100% NRCS residue chart. Notice how much dryer the roots look in this pic compared to either pic above. The wet dirt was easily removed, leaving much of the root system intact. The roots are growing and elongating very well.
This post brings up another subject, --fall tillering compared to spring tillering. I'll address that subject in another post.