Managing your Crop in a Shortened Growing Season
As we progress through the month of May, rainfall across much of the Corn Belt has slowed planting progression, putting pressure on all of us to not only get the crop in timely, but under some challenging conditions. As the threat of weather delays pushes planting closer to the end of May, this calls into question what the downstream effects will be.
For this month, our focus is shifting ahead to how we want to influence this crop over the next 45 days.
Looking back to last month’s article, we addressed managing nitrogen and sulfur applications, as well as the importance of timing of those applications to maximize early-season growth. Now with delayed planting in many areas, we have two things happening simultaneously:
- Low SWI/Low organic matter: The higher landscape acres that dry out first don’t have a crop on them, leaving them exposed and subject to evaporation.
- High SWI/High N loss: Acres of increased catchment that may have already had nitrogen applied are lying anaerobic due to heavy rainfall. N loss is a primary concern here, especially if not protected with a stabilizer.
Start with Environment
With corn, it will be important not to waste time once the crop is established. Where sidedress will be the primary application of nitrogen and/or sulfur, get moving earlier in the crops’ lifecycle rather than waiting until V4/V5 to start applications. Remember, you are in a dead sprint to make up for lost time.
For our customers, we have management strategies that mitigate these effects by increasing plant densities where we experience reduced node counts later in the season. Understanding a variety’s characteristics about how it wants to build yield can lead to altering product placement to optimize yield.
Isolate Mechanism
As we progress into later vegetative stages, it is likely this crop is going to be living “hand-to-mouth”, so how it is managed from V10 through the reproductive stages will be equally as important. If you have read some of our previous articles, we have touched on the timing of fungicide and how that will slow a plants’ respiration rate. The result of this slowed respiration is increased carbohydrate (sucrose) in the plant — this is important as we prepare for pollination.
Managing for the best possible outcome:
Success is contingent on understanding the environment, having it accurately described, and then isolating the mechanism you are trying to influence. Putting all the pieces together as part of a systematic approach can only lead us to the best possible outcome.
Be proactive against mother nature
Connect with our agronomic experts to better understand how the unique attributes of your acre and our understanding of its mechanisms can provide insights for an already challenging year.