Harvesting

What is harvesting?

Harvesting is the process of collecting the mature rice crop from the field. Harvesting consists of cutting, threshing, cleaning, hauling and bagging. Field drying and stacking or piling are optional. Harvesting can be performed manually using sickles and knives, or mechanically with threshers or combine harvesters.

Why is proper harvesting important?

Harvesting at the right time and in the right way maximizes grain yield and minimizes grain losses and quality deterioration.

When to harvest

Harvest according to the grain’s moisture content. This is critical for a good harvest. For more information, see IRRI’s Measuring Moisture Content fact sheet.

OperationDesired moisture content (%)*Primary cause of losses
Harvesting 20-25 Shattering if grain is too dry 
Mechanical threshing 20-25 Incomplete threshing, spillage, grain damage and cracking 
Hand threshing <20  
Drying
  • <14 for grains
  • <13 for seeds
  • <9 for long-term storage
  • 14 for milling
If drying is delayed: spoilage, fungal damage, discoloration, smell, loss of vigor

* these moisture contents are tropical, humid climates typical for most varieties and rice-growing countries in Asia.

Harvesting systems

  • Manual harvesting

Manual harvesting makes use of traditional threshing tools such as threshing racks, simple treadle threshers and animals for trampling.

manual harvesting

  • Manual harvesting + machine threshing

Rice is manually threshed, then cleaned with a machine thresher.

manual harvesting2

  • Machine reaping + machine threshing
A reaper cuts and lays the crop in a line. Threshing and cleaning can then be performed manually or by machine. machine reaping
  • Combine harvesting
The combine harvester combines all operations: cutting, handling, threshing and cleaning. machine reaping2

Other ways to decide when to harvest:

  • Grains should be firm but not brittle when squeezed between the teeth.
  • When 80–85% of the grains are straw-colored (yellow in color).
  • In the dry season, harvest 28–35 days after heading. In the wet season, harvest 32–38 days after heading.

Harvesting operations

  • Cutting - cut the mature panicles and straw above ground.
  • Threshing - separate the paddy grain from the non-grain material.
  • Cleaning - remove immature, unfilled and non-grain materials.
  • Field drying (optional) - leave the cut crop in the field for sun-drying.
  • Hauling - move the cut crop to the threshing area.
  • Stacking/Piling (optional) - temporarily store the harvested crop in stacks or piles.
  • Bagging - bag the threshed grain for transport and storage.

Note: Avoid field drying and stacking/piling, which rapidly reduces quality and increases losses.

Developed with input from M Gummert, JF Rickman, and MA Bell.