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The actual variation from year to year in the average yields
per acre of wheat, barley and oats though appreciable is not
extreme, that is to say, the difference between a good yield and
a poor yield on the average of the country is only a question as a
rule of 3 or 4 cwt.* If is much wider in the case of some other
crops. In the following table are shown the highest and lowest
yields so far recorded for all the main crops together with the
highest expressed as a percentage of the lowest.
HicresT AND LowEST AVERAGE YIELDS PER ACRE OF
CERTAIN CROPS.
TOD.
PE
Wheat
Barley
Oats -
Beans
Peas -
Clover hay
Meadow hay
Hops
Potatoes - -
Turnips and swedes
Mangolds -
Highest
vield.
Cwt.
19-8
17-3
16-3
18-6
16-2
33-7
29-2
17-1
Tons.
71
15-7
21.0
Year.
1921
1909
1907
1906
1906
1889
[898
1924
1922
1909
1917
Lowest
vield.
Cwt.
14-2
13-3
11-6
9-6
9-3
16-5
12:0
4-8
Tons.
4-8
7-4
12-8
Year.
Percentage
highest to
lowest.
1893
1893
1922
[917
1922
1893
1893
| S88
Per cent.
139
130
141
194
174
204
243
356
1912 148
1921 | 212
1893 173
The wide variation in the yields of some of these crops naturally
affects the ten-year averages considerably. When a very good
season may yield double the crop of a poor season, the ten-year
average is especially liable to abrupt rises or falls and a much
more extended period than ten years would be necessary to
gauge the tendency of any movement there may be.
An examination of the yields per acre of each of these crops,
apart from potatoes and hops, indicates a general resemblance
to the corn crops. For practically all farm crops except potatoes
the period of maximum yield was approximately the ten year
period 1901-10, and especially the latter half of the period, in
which it was rare to find any crop yielding in any year less than
the average for the previous decade. For this the weather must
have been mainly responsible as also for the falling off which
occurred shortly before the outbreak of war. Subsequently,
yields were probably affected by war conditions owing to the
* It has to be remembered that this relatively small variation is the
result of averaging the yields in all parts of the country. Individual
parishes, for example, in the same year, may vary from 9 to 27 cwt. in the
case of wheat, while the same parish which in a good year may be estimated
to have an average yield of 20 cwt. may in a bad year only produce
9 cwt. A description of the method of estimating the production of corn
crops is given in Chapter T