When did you get that in the ground?20 miles south of Waco TX
I think this field was planted on February 24th. We try to plant between Feb 20 and March 5th. If we get held out of the field till the last week in March we seldom do any good here. It gets too hot in June to make corn unless it just rains every week. A few wheat patches have been cut already.When did you get that in the ground?
All I know is beans can’t stand a freeze, corn growing point below ground will. Although on the ground will pretty much kill all. Mostly the BTO’s around here put in beans first, mainly to cover all the acres they farm.
Soybean stands a little worse than I'd like for our stuff planted end of April into early May. Dry, hot weather caused some crusting. Not too bad in the main part of the field but some of the ends where there was more traffic looks rough.
All my corn fields are rowable and beans are pushing through but not quite rowable tomorrow or Sat. I don't feel too bad about missing the early April window.
Seedling transplants? Holy crap, that has to be fun.Watermelon trials went in well (southern Indiana)
You don't power wash after each field?!? With SCN and such I'm surprised it isn't a company mandate.Great day to power wash a planter as long as you stay up wind
It’s not bad. Planting is much easier than harvest and evalSeedling transplants? Holy crap, that has to be fun.
You don't power wash after each field?!? With SCN and such I'm surprised it isn't a company mandate.
While often ignored or impractical, it WAS policy in some places ~1990ish. No, you would not see a failure. SCN is almost ubiquitous now so, probably no biggie. Never had a cooperator mention it.Never have in almost 20 years of plots at ISU and Pioneer. Never seen a problem either
I think that cleaning equipment would help. But there are things that can’t stop the spread. Wind, 4 legged critters. And a few things I will leave unsaid.You don't power wash after each field?!? With SCN and such I'm surprised it isn't a company mandate.