Flooded Farms Cause Planting Delay

Published On: April 26, 2013

May 1 Isn’t Really A Planting Deadline

Ponded farm ground is widespread in central Illinois, entirely stopping corn planting for the past two weeks. Despite the traditional rush to get corn planted by May 1, over the past 10 years the average planting completion by May 1 has been only 40%. Year after year, the farm experience has been that weather later in the growing season has more effect on yield than planting date, provided planting is completed by the end of May.

Today’s big planters enable very fast planting once soil temperatures and soil moisture are optimum. The University of Illinois has observed a repeatedly-demonstrated capacity to plant half the Illinois corn crop in ten days. Farm operators do not want the yield loss that comes from planting in cold, wet soils, compacted by a rush into the field. The vast majority of midwest farmers agree with this, as only 1% of corn planting has occurred in Illinois and Iowa.

Trent has observed ponding in his fields soak into the ground in a day or so, recharging the groundwater which was badly depleted in last year’s drought. The relative quickness of the pond draining indicates to Trent that there is still plenty of room in the soil for more water. The soil surface is still shiny, meaning it’s too wet to plant. Trent would rather have the wet soil ahead of planting rather than have wet soil, after planting, make seedlings struggle.

More from The Field Report

Dry Weather Speeds Harvest

October 28, 2025|

Trent Brandenburg is trying to get his field work done "before it rains". Much of the area Trent farms is in "extreme drought" according to the Illinois Drought Monitor https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?IL map, which is updated every Thursday. The very dry soil [...]

In a Drought, but Corn is Too Wet to Harvest

September 18, 2025|

The current Illinois drought map (11 September) shows severe drought in the northern 40% of Piatt County and moderate drought in the rest of Piatt and adjacent areas of neighboring counties. Trent Brandenburg has barely started harvesting because his corn [...]

  • Crop Protection of soybeans with drone spraying

Summertime Mowing And Spraying

August 6, 2025|

Trent Brandenburg has been busy mowing his lawn and his roadsides due to the sunshine and frequent rains making his grass grow as well as his corn and soybeans. He has been hiring aerial spraying of fungicides to suppress disease [...]