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wheat_copyKANSAS CITY: A late blast of cold and snowy conditions could harm parts of the US winter wheat growing area, with widespread freeze damage feared in some of the more mature fields, experts said.

"I think we'll certainly have some (freeze damage)," said Travis Miller, an agronomist at Texas A&M University. "We did not dodge a bullet. It is a mess out there, both from freeze and drought."

It will take several days after the freeze passes to determine the extent of plant-tissue damage, wheat experts said, with areas where wheat fields were maturing quickly seen suffering the most harm.

Wheat fields in key growing areas of Texas have been two to three weeks ahead of normal maturity due to recent beneficial moisture and warm conditions before the freeze that descended on the Plains over the weekend.

Temperatures fell into the low 20s and upper teens (Fahrenheit) in Texas and were much colder in top producer Kansas, where they dropped to single digits - 2 to 4 degrees - in some areas over the weekend, said Mary Knapp, Kansas state climatologist.

MDA Weather Services (Cropcast) meteorologist Anthony Chipriano said overnight Sunday and overnight Monday would be the coldest readings for the week in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.

"There could be some potential harm but it's going to turn a little warmer after tonight so I don't see much impact for wheat," Chipriano said.

There is a freeze warning from north central Texas extending to Dallas and as far south as Waco, temperatures will drop to 32 degrees Fahrenheit early Tuesday morning, he said. "The freeze could extend into Oklahoma and Kansas as well," he added.

Chipriano said low readings by Wednesday morning would be back up to the mid-30s in most of the wheat belt.

Much of the new winter wheat crop in the US Plains has been struggling due to extended drought, making the young plants vulnerable to wild weather fluctuations. Recent snow and rain have improved conditions, but the crop generally is still seen as likely to have much-shortened production potential.

"Wheat is a wreck looking for a place to happen," Miller said.

The Texas Agricultural Statistics Service on Monday afternoon said that the Texas winter wheat crop was rated 47 percent poor to very poor due to the drought, 34 percent fair and 19 percent good to excellent.

Kansas wheat was rated 31 percent poor to very poor, with 40 percent fair and 29 percent good to excellent. The Oklahoma crop was rated 33 percent poor to very poor, 41 percent fair and 26 percent good to excellent, according to state agricultural officials.

<Center><b><i>Copyright Reuters, 2013</b></i><br></center>

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