What We See Go Wrong on Farms During Harvest — And How to Avoid It

Published On: 11 February 2026Categories: Agricultural, Innovation
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Harvest is the most unforgiving time in the agricultural calendar. Volumes are high, timelines are tight, and small inefficiencies quickly turn into costly delays. From a transport and logistics perspective, harvest pressure doesn’t create problems — it reveals them.

These are some of the most common issues we see on farms during harvest, and what can be done to avoid them.

1. Loading Areas Become the Bottleneck

One of the biggest issues during harvest is congestion at loading points. Trucks arrive on time, but end up waiting because the loading area isn’t designed for volume or flow.

Common problems include:

  • Limited turning space for trucks
  • Poor access in wet conditions
  • Multiple operations sharing the same loading point

How to avoid it:
Assess loading layouts before harvest starts. Simple changes like widening access, improving surface conditions, or staggering loading times can significantly reduce delays.

2. Equipment Is Mismatched to the Job

During peak harvest, available equipment often dictates decisions rather than suitability. We regularly see loaders, trailers, or handling equipment that slow the entire operation.

This leads to:

  • Longer loading times
  • Increased spillage
  • Higher risk of breakdowns

How to avoid it:
Match equipment capacity to expected volumes. Efficient loading is about consistency and throughput, not just moving product off the field.

3. Poor Communication Between Farm and Transporter

Even well-planned logistics fail without clear communication. Changes in harvest pace, field conditions, or loading readiness are often not relayed in time.

This results in:

  • Trucks arriving too early or too late
  • Drivers waiting unnecessarily
  • Missed delivery windows

How to avoid it:
Establish clear points of contact and daily schedules. Real-time updates — even simple phone calls — prevent most avoidable delays.

4. Underestimating Turnaround Time

Many harvest plans focus on distance travelled but overlook on-farm turnaround time. Waiting to load, repositioning vehicles, and administrative delays add up quickly.

When turnaround time is underestimated:

  • Fewer loads are moved per day
  • Transport costs effectively increase
    Pressure shifts onto drivers and equipment

How to avoid it:
Plan transport around realistic turnaround times, not ideal conditions. Build in buffers for weather, access, and loading variability.

5. Safety Takes a Back Seat Under Pressure

Harvest urgency often pushes safety considerations aside. Overcrowded loading areas, rushed operators, and poor visibility increase risk.

The cost of an incident during harvest extends far beyond delays — it can stop operations entirely.

How to avoid it:
Design loading areas with safety in mind. Clear traffic flow, trained operators, and defined procedures protect people and keep operations moving.

The Bigger Picture

Most harvest logistics problems don’t originate on the road — they start on the farm. Efficient agricultural transport depends as much on layout, planning, and communication as it does on trucks and drivers.

Farms that prepare their logistics before harvest don’t just move more product — they reduce stress, improve safety, and protect margins when it matters most.

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