We Can Grow More With Rain Than Without It

First corn tassels seen!
Trent Brandenburg is philosophical about the wet June, remembering that last year by this time (early July 2012) the worst drought in years had become established. Trent had to replant about 10% of his corn and soybean plantings due to ponded ground and hail damage. Trent adds that you can’t see many ponded areas from the road now that the crops are growing taller. Today, July 8, 2013, “I will be done replanting, because by the time the wet spots I haven’t replanted yet are dry enough it will be July 20 which is too late to plant.”
Trent thinks there is enough soil moisture now to get good corn pollination. He still wants some rains for ear and pod fill because the corn and soybean plants are shallow-rooted due to the unusually wet June. Ideally there will be good drying weather this fall and the first frost will be late enough to maximize yields from the late planting.
Trent is just beginning to see corn tassels. He estimates the corn crop is about two weeks behind “normal”.
More from The Field Report
In a Drought, but Corn is Too Wet to Harvest
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 [...]
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Everything Looks Pretty Good, Says Trent
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