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Rod Gurganus
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 1 ธ.ค. 2012
วีดีโอ
2019 BFMA Tour Rod Gurganus
มุมมอง 625 ปีที่แล้ว
Rod Gurganus talks about a four year study comparing layby nitrogen rates and where nitrogen is placed relative to the plant for profitable corn production in the blacklands of eastern NC.
2019 BFMA Tour Scott Tilley
มุมมอง 385 ปีที่แล้ว
Scott Tilley describes a study looking at fungicide placement (broadcast vs. Y-Drop 360 undercover) and carrier rate (5, 10, and 15gpa) in corn at the 2019 Blackland Farm Managers Tour in Fairfield, NC.
2019 BFMA Tour Ron Heiniger
มุมมอง 835 ปีที่แล้ว
Ron Heiniger discusses the impact of heat on the corn crop.
2019 BFMA Tour Charlie Cahoon
มุมมอง 525 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Charlie Cahoon talks about weed control in the organic soils of eastern North Carolina.
2017 Road Show: Carl Crozier, Soil Fertility Update
มุมมอง 697 ปีที่แล้ว
2017 Road Show: Carl Crozier, Soil Fertility Update
2017 Road Show: Jim Dunphy, Soybean Production Update
มุมมอง 557 ปีที่แล้ว
2017 Road Show: Jim Dunphy, Soybean Production Update
2017 Road Show: Ron Heiniger, The Principles of High Corn Yield
มุมมอง 6907 ปีที่แล้ว
2017 Road Show: Ron Heiniger, The Principles of High Corn Yield
2017 Road Show: Chad Poole, Water Management
มุมมอง 1087 ปีที่แล้ว
2017 Road Show: Chad Poole, Water Management
Soil life is what bonds soil to plant roots. For soil structure and tilth I will take corn one hundred times before I take soybean once. Corn puts down a mass of root system and then you have a large biomass on top to help feed the soil life. And put armor on the soil. Soybeans move our soil backwards up here.
😍😍😇😇
Something I don't understand about farmers in the Midwest... they'll do practically ANYTHING to increase corn yields, even though corn is dirt cheap and yields are already high, meaning the "low fruit has already been picked" (meaning it's harder and more expensive to get even modest incremental yield gains) and even though corn is DIRT CHEAP... Meanwhile they just throw soybeans in the ground as an afterthought with no fertilization and much less management (other than weed control to make harvest easier and keep the fields clean for the following corn crop) and just take whatever mediocre yields they can get, while there is SO MUCH room for improvement, most of it EASY gains or improvements, and while soybeans are worth about 3-4 times as much per bushel as corn, meaning every extra bushel of beans produced brings in as much money to the farm as 3-4 bushels of extra corn... Kinda crazy... OL J R :)