May 1, 2013

4 Min Read
Facing the Corn Planting Roller Coaster

It’s been a rough ride for the nation’s farmers. Last year, their crops were ravaged by drought. This year, too much rain has kept them out of the fields at planting time.

This uncertainty marks the plight of farmers and the uncertainties of weather and their dependence upon it.  

“The challenge farmers have is in dealing with extremes,” says Purdue Extension agronomist Tony Vyn, who advises farmers on the best tillage methods for different crops and soils.

Indeed, Indiana farmers are almost getting used to dealing with both extremes – what Purdue Extension corn specialist Bob Nielsen refers to as “roller coaster years” of late.

“Over the past few years, in the even-numbered years we've had early planting, and in the odd-numbered years we've had late planting,” he notes.

This year, true to form, the problem is late planting. It has been so slow that it is among the five-slowest years for spring planting in the past 20, Nielsen says.

Indiana had the seventh-wettest April on record, with a statewide average of 6.4 in. of precipitation – nearly 3 in. above normal.

As a result, only 1% of Indiana's corn crop was planted by the week ending April 28, compared with 67% last year –  an even-numbered year when some farmers planted as early as March – and the five-year average of 30%, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service.

Soybeans are not yet reported because they typically are planted a few weeks later than corn.

Depending on conditions of individual fields, farmers would need several days for fields to dry to the point where they can work in them. Unlike a homeowner mowing the lawn just hours after a rain, farmers can't just drive their equipment onto their fields so soon.

“It's different for farmers,” Vyn says. “They shouldn'tbe out there.”

Heavy farm equipment on a wet field can compact the soil, and seeds planted in compacted soil might not grow the necessary root systems for optimal plant development.

Vyn advises farmers anxious to get into their fields not to succumb to three common tillage temptations: tilling too early or too often and when it's too wet. He says farmers need to be patient and wait for a break in the weather.

That break will come, but slowly. The outlook for the first half of May is continued frequent rainfall with below-normal temperatures for Indiana, according to the State Climate Office, based at Purdue University. Both temperature and rainfall should moderate to more typical May conditions later in the month. At this time of year, normal rainfall is near 1 in. per week.

When farmers do get into their fields, Nielsen says 25-30% of the corn crop could be planted in a week and the rest of it a week later – still in time for maximum yield potential.

“So we can catch up pretty fast,” he says.

Yield potential typically is greatest in Indiana when corn is planted by May 10, but tillage, soil fertility, and mid-summer rainfall and temperatures are among many other factors that influence yield.

“By itself, delayed planting isn't a sure path to lower yields,” Nielsen assures.

In 2009, for example, farmers had planted only 20% of the crop by late April because of wet conditions, yet their yield at harvest was 9% above trend.

But if farmers can't get into their fields by mid- to late May, they might have to decide whether to plant hybrid seeds other than they originally planned. The switch would be to a hybrid that would take less time to mature so the crop could be harvested before the threat of an autumn killing freeze.

The tradeoff for them, however, is that such earlier-maturing seeds might not yield as much grain and, consequently, not as much income.

Detailed information on what farmers would need to consider if they are seriously delayed in planting corn is available at http://www.agry.purdue.edu/ext/corn/news/timeless/HybridMaturityDelayedPlant.html.

Soybeans

Weather conditions in early May aren't crucial for soybeans since many farmers plant their corn ahead of soybeans. Planting of soybeans, therefore, also could be delayed.

Soybean farmers usually are at the early stages of planting at this point, with nearly half of the crop planted by May 20. Planting can extend well into June.

Still, eventually soybean farmers, too, will depend on the weather for favorable conditions so they can do their job.

“Just because it’s a day in a work week doesn't mean you can get out in the fields to work,” says Shaun Casteel, Purdue Extension soybean specialist. “A person working in an office goes to work rain or shine. Not so for farmers.”

 

Subscribe to Our Newsletters
National Hog Farmer is the source for hog production, management and market news

You May Also Like