Red Dirt And Round Bales

Oklahoma Wheat Roots: Cold, Faith, Grit


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Oklahoma wheat is more than a crop—it is a story of winter, patience, drought, faith, and families who planted anyway.

In this episode of Red Dirt and Round Bales, Dave Deken looks at why hard red winter wheat took root in Oklahoma and why it still fits the red dirt today. From the science of vernalization to the arrival of Turkey Red wheat with Mennonite farmers, this short reflection connects Oklahoma agriculture history with the hard seasons that shape both crops and people.

Key takeaways:

  • Winter wheat needs cold weather before it can shift from leaf growth to grain production.
  • Turkey Red hard winter wheat helped shape wheat production across the Plains.
  • Mennonite farmers, mills, railroads, and elevators all played a role in building wheat country.
  • Oklahoma settlers faced drought, uncertainty, and borrowed seed before wheat became part of the state’s rhythm.
  • Wheat’s story is also a rural lesson in patience, endurance, and faith.
  • Detailed timestamped rundown

    00:00–00:37 — Opening from the road

    Dave Deken introduces the episode and reflects on traveling Oklahoma since early April while documenting the wheat crop for the Oklahoma Wheat Commission.
    00:38–01:17 — Why winter wheat is different
    The episode explains that hard red winter wheat is planted in the fall, settles in before winter, and depends on the cold season in a way many crops do not.
    01:18–01:45 — Vernalization explained
    Dave introduces vernalization, the cold-weather process winter wheat needs before it can move from leaf growth to grain production.
    01:46–02:30 — Turkey Red wheat arrives on the Plains
    The story shifts to Turkey Red hard winter wheat, brought by German-speaking Mennonite farmers from the Russian Empire and Black Sea region.
    02:31–03:05 — Bernhard Warkentin and Kansas wheat
    Warkentin’s role in encouraging Mennonite settlement, experimenting with hard red winter wheat, and helping bring wheat seed from Russia to Kansas is highlighted. The Kansas Historical Society identifies Bernhard Warkentin as a key Mennonite promoter and miller associated with Turkey Red wheat in Kansas.
    03:06–03:35 — Wheat needed infrastructure
    Dave points out that wheat was never just a field crop. It needed mills, railroads, elevators, growers, harvesters, shippers, and markets.
    03:36–04:05 — Wheat moves into Oklahoma
    The episode follows wheat into Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory, noting the timing of the 1889 Land Run and the dry years that followed.
    04:06–04:35 — Borrowed seed and quiet faith
    Oklahoma settlers facing drought borrowed seed wheat from railways, a moment Dave frames as a quiet act of faith: planting anyway.
    04:36–04:59 — Closing reflection
    The episode closes by connecting wheat’s biology to rural endurance: sometimes the hard season is what prepares a crop, and people, to bear grain.

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    Red Dirt And Round BalesBy Dave Deken