Today would have been my parent’s anniversary. One year when Mother’s Day and their anniversary fell on the same day, dad got mom a new harrow.
Isn’t the old saying, “You work on Sunday….you pay for it on Monday.”
Growing up it seemed to work that way.
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Here’s a chart from our very own university. Not worth it to plant corn in early April. Soybeans highest yield potential is the earliest you can plant them.
A lot of customers I work with have purchased older used corn planters as dedicated bean planters. You really don’t need all the fancy bells and whistles for soybeans.Seems like to do it right, you probably start on beans, switch to corn in late April, then switch back once the corn is in. Switching out planters is not what I’d call a fun job, but if we had a dedicated bean planter, that’s what I’d do.
Large operations are now planting corn and beans at the same time.A lot of customers I work with have purchased older used corn planters as dedicated bean planters. You really don’t need all the fancy bells and whistles for soybeans.
Most people have two planters anymore around here. Even the guys with 160 acres lol.Seems like to do it right, you probably start on beans, switch to corn in late April, then switch back once the corn is in. Switching out planters is not what I’d call a fun job, but if we had a dedicated bean planter, that’s what I’d do.
At least make it worth her while, raccoons will only have an appetizer.Well my 3 yr old grand niece was excited yesterday. The sweet corn I gave her is emerging.
Her and her mom are raising sweet corn Pilgrim style - corn 1st, then after the corn gets so tall plant pole (?)beans then after that comes up plant squash or pumpkins.
It was only 16 seeds but boy she sure is enthused.![]()
Buy another planter, duh.Seems like to do it right, you probably start on beans, switch to corn in late April, then switch back once the corn is in. Switching out planters is not what I’d call a fun job, but if we had a dedicated bean planter, that’s what I’d do.
View attachment 149336
Here’s a chart from our very own university. Not worth it to plant corn in early April. Soybeans highest yield potential is the earliest you can plant them.
Anyone having beans struggle come out of the ground? I’ve got two fields that I might have to replant by the looks of it. Just not pushing through and starting to snap some heads. Hopefully it rains tonight.
They were planted no till on April 12. There is a small crust but it’s not remotely the worst I’ve seen.
There were a ton of seed beans harvested last fall at insanely dry moistures. Like 8% dry
We had more 80% and 85% germ beans to sell this year than I can remember for quite some time.
I generally agree with your view. We normally plant corn before beans, but recent research shows soybeans will start losing yield potential before corn based on planting date.
Not really what the chart says though, the soybean data doesn't even start until nearly May, whereas the corn chart is the middle of April. If you map the corn data to the beans data it's also at the peak of the curve in late April.View attachment 149336
Here’s a chart from our very own university. Not worth it to plant corn in early April. Soybeans highest yield potential is the earliest you can plant them.
Which part are you referring to? The plant date? Or the practice?I think you may have just answered your own question.
Be curious to know where you're seeing later beans move North. I would say the overall industry trend is the opposite and most folks have moved half to a full maturity group earlier.Part of that is later day beans making there way further north...
Not where I’m at on the MN border. Used to be 1.5-1.9. Now 2.3-2.5 beans. 103 corn used to be the late stuff, now 108-110 is common. 103 is the early stuff.Be curious to know where you're seeing later beans move North. I would say the overall industry trend is the opposite and most folks have moved half to a full maturity group earlier.