CHÂTEAU CARA GOLD NATURE® (MALTA ORGÁNICA)
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CC26 mm, Rose with silver edge (10500/caja)
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Kegcaps 64 mm, Rojas 1485 Sankey S-type (EU) (1000/caja)
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Kegcaps 69 mm, Blancas 86 Grundey G-type (850/caja)
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Kegcaps 69 mm, Rojas 102 Grundey G-type (850/caja)
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UK: Malting barley crops look very promising south of M4 motorway
Malting barley crops look very promising on the light chalkland south of the M4 motorway in southern England, with winter barley harvesting likely to start in earnest next week, Farmers Weekly reported on July 2.
Jonathan Arnold, trading director of grain merchants Robin Appel, says winter barley crops look very variable geographically, but the south of England had some rain in April and May which helped crops.
I am seeing crops across Hampshire, Wiltshire and Dorset of Maris Otter and Craft and also feed barley of serious potential, he tells Farmers Weekly.
Small pockets of feed winter barley on the lightest land have been cut, but combining of the old heritage malting variety Maris Otter and mainstream malter Craft along with feed barley is set to start in the next few days.
The group trades with 400-plus growers stretching from Cornwall to north Norfolk and from Hampshire up to Yorkshire, and Mr Arnold says he is seeing less variability in crops south of the M4 corridor.
He also reports good-looking spring barley crops and excellent winter wheat crops, especially on chalk soils in the area.
UK maltsters use about 1.9 mln tonnes of barley each year, but only a relatively small amount about 250,000 tonnes comes from winter barley, with the majority from the spring-sown crop.
Overall demand for malting barley could be lower this year due to the coronavirus lockdown, although immediate demand could pick up as pubs begin to reopen.
Although the area of winter barley has fallen this season after a wet autumn, a big rise in spring plantings is likely to see an overall barley harvest largely unchanged at about 8 mln tonnes.