Canadian Prairie farmers are experiencing a welcome shift in weather conditions from a dry and warm winter to more normal seasonal patterns, following a year of severe drought due to El Niño. This change has led to increased optimism for the 2024-25 season, with reduced drought levels and cooler temperatures. However, longer-range forecasts indicate a potential return to warmer and drier conditions that could impact final production. Farmers have adjusted their planting plans accordingly, with a decrease in wheat and barley planting and an increase in canola and lentils. Oat planting has recovered from last year's drought, though above-average yields are needed to meet demand. The key challenge now is to ensure these early seasons of promising crop growth do not suffer under the predicted warm and dry summer, while needing consistent rain to see the crops through to harvest.