Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Condition of crops

Sorry for being late, but have been busy. corn crop looks good and hopefully next week will have some tassels. We have been getting timely rains but not in excess right now. Got some liquid nitrogen down 3 weeks ago as a sidedress and it has really taken off. This is a first for us as we have used dry urea to top dress but corn got to far along and we wanted to try this anyways. Saved our men some time and effort and I think we will reap what extra this cost. Traveled to Ohio last week for a meeting with Lee (youngest son) last week and we decided that we would not trade our corn crop right now for any other that we saw. Ours is very consistent and even with very little holes for stand losses.

soybeans are looking good and just need to harvest wheat to get the last ones in the ground. Ours are a little later as we are trying to improve seed quality of our beans as they are all potential seed beans. had something unusual happen in our no-till soybean field this year. It looks like alien circle in the field, but field mice have taken refuge in the corn residue last year and have eaten the soybean plants we have in this one field. I don't know that there is any thing we can do to remedy this for this year.

Pleasse post a comment up as that would spur me on to write more.
Thanks and have a great week.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Almost done planting corn

Today should winds us up for corn planting except for some spots that may have to be replanted due to being under water. I would say less than 10 acres for us total in some low spots in our fields. We have started planting beans and will move forward with that just as soon as possible. May 11th is very early for us to get this going for us as we are concerned with seed quality of the production acres this year. this has been a very unusual spring here in Central Kentucky as we have gone from 80 degree days in April with very little rain to a deluge of rain where we had about 12 inches in 10 days. That stopped all planting for us. Hopefully we can get our test plot planted this week, I'm anxious to walk the plot and look at how the new varieties emerge compared to some of the varieties that we have had for awhile. It really gets interesting after grain fill and you can see how they react to stress and heat. some central corn belt varieties just don't cut it down here with those combinations of heat and stress. Hope everyone gets their corn planted with great stands and vigor and can get soybeans in the ground also.
Sprayed wheat on Monday with Caramba (fungicide) and Warrior II (insecticide) to see how they will work to help with wheat diseases and germination as the wheat will be for seed. If you have any questions or comments please post or send me an email.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Floods, rain, early planting, soybean rates

I hope everyone survived the deluge of rain this past weekend. We have 600 of the anticipated 750 acres of corn planted. We started April 7 (earliest ever for the farm)and planted until the rains of April 23rd came. We have slowed down since then as we don't want to get on fields to wet and cause compaction problems. We have only about 3 acres of corn under water so we won't have to replant too much. Corn looks good so far and we will start sidedressing and post herbicide spraying next week. It will be good to compare some of the earlier planting of corn results to a later planting of corn this year.

Just as soon as corn is finished we will be planting soybeans. We will be using some new things for soybeans this year and I will keep you posted on how they work out. All of are beans will be treated with Trilex 2000, Gaucho 600, and most will be inoculated with Optimize 400 which has an LCO promoter to promote better plant health and we hope better quality beans and yield. We also will be using AMP(LCO promoter) to spray on some beans and corn under a program with EMB for growers. It will be a busy and interesting year for me to look at what is happening. Our main goal is to increase the quality of our soybeans as these are all seed beans.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Late as usual!

Again late, but I thought I would have a few words to say, WOW what a different spring. We need some rain, our target date to start planting corn was April 15th but we started on April 7th(earliest ever for us) and now have 350 acres in the ground (some up). I have been busy getting test seed ready for our test plots and will be looking at several new varieties for soybeans, grain and silage. Hopefully we can get the test plot planted late this week or next. We will have about 20 acres of test soybeans and corn for this coming year. I'm really excited about the next new hybrids and the new soybeans that we are growing and looking at. We have a new CF 491n (supply limited)that really looks good in tests and will be a full season/double crop bean for KY and TN. This is a late indetermate that has southern breeding into to it to take the heat and stress. We are doing the same for our corn hybrids in that everything developed for the central corn belt does not exactly work well here. Hopefully we can hit a home run or a grand slam with some these new silages and corn hybrids that we will have.
Everytime I open up a magazine or see a website one of the things always discussed is weed resistant. I hope to be able to go to a conference in Memphis and
listen the guy from Australia to hear more about this. He says that glysophate will be ineffective in the US in a number of years unless we change the way we use. All articles say that you want to keep resistance off of your farm by using residuals on all crops and not just roundup. As a cost saver, you might want to look at going to either Liberty corn and or soybeans for next year. You could use LL soybeans this year on your double crop beans and change up the chemistry in your fields. theri is no known resistence to IGNITE herbicide. No new herbicide since 1998, roundup was a one in a 100 year discovery. Be sure and reply and I will try and get back to you. Anyone else have any thoughts please post!!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Slow to Post

I am about as fast posting this as it was for us to complete our harvest this year. I won't complain as we had a record crop of corn and soybeans to put in the bins. I have been to many different conferences and seminars since I last posted. I would like to share with you the one thing that has been a central theme with all of these seed conferences. The five pathways to success to increase yields and profitability: 1. Plant quality seed, yes Caverndale Farms Brand Seeds can deliver this to you. 2. Make sure soil conditions are right, so you don't have stand and compactions issues down the road. 3. Use the right variety for each field that will give that field a chance to shine. 4. Make sure seed placement depth is correct, check that planter out to be sure that it is doing the right job for you. 5. Evaluate your past practices, nuture your 2010 crop by looking at your soil tests and fertization requirements for this year. Do you have weed problems or insect problems? With more and more resistant weeds to glyphosate do you need to change chemical modes of actions or are you seeing different weeds than what we use to be battling? Are you getting a price for crops above the average price? Do you need to lock in a price to cover your input costs plus a profit?