The main concerns for harvest timing are lodging and shattering. The
risk of lodging increases quickly as the seeds get heavier, the leaves
fall and the winds become stronger. Shattering occurs in over-mature plants
and causes much of the grain to be lost if harvest is delayed too long.
The harvest window is therefore fairly brief.
Pictures of maturing buckwheat seeds
Because of the way buckwheat ripens, immature seeds occur on the plant at harvest. Harvesting should be done when three fourths of the seeds are ripe. Inspect the seeds closely, and count only filled seeds. There will often be many empty green hulls from late flowers, so a quick look is likely to underestimate the stage of maturity of the seeds.
When three fourths of the seeds are brown and hard the crop should be cut for windrowing or direct combining.