Search results

Search results

  1. “Tassel Ears” Sightings in Corn

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/%E2%80%9Ctassel-ears%E2%80%9D-sightings-corn

    Tassel Ears” (Figure 1) are showing up in corn fields around Ohio. Corn is the only major field crop characterized by separate male and female flowering structures, the tassel and ear, respectively. In most corn fields it is not unusual to find a few scat ...

  2. 2016 Ohio Wheat Performance Test Available Online

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2016-23/2016-ohio-wheat-performance-test-available-online

    A pdf of the 2016 Ohio Wheat Performance Test can be found at the Soybean and Small Grain website at:  http://stepupsoy.osu.edu/node/35.   A sortable version of the Ohio Wheat Performance Test can be found at: http://www.oardc.ohio-state.edu/wheattrials/ ...

  3. Corn and Soybean: What’s in Store for 2016?

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2016-08/corn-and-soybean-what%E2%80%99s-store-2016

    This “spring,” the weather has gone from snow and 24 degrees to sunny and 80 degrees within one week. This unusual weather leaves many of us wondering what’s in store for the remainder of the growing season. In general, unfavorable weather conditions tend ...

  4. Warm Weather Hit in a Big Way This Last Week

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2016-08/warm-weather-hit-big-way-last-week

    After a cold start to April the warm weather hit in a big way this last week. Temperatures now for Ohio are running 3-5 degrees below normal for April but will likely be down to a degree or two below normal by late this week for April as the warmth cancel ...

  5. Time to stock up on nozzles now! But do you know which one to buy?

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2016-08/time-stock-nozzles-now-do-you-know-which-one-buy

    This is the time of the year you must complete shopping for nozzles because the spraying season is just around the corner. Although nozzles are some of the least expensive components of a sprayer, they hold a high value in their ability to influence spray ...

  6. Hot, Dry Conditions Stressing Corn

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/hot-dry-conditions-stressing-corn

    Throughout Ohio, especially northern Ohio, there are corn fields exhibiting drought and temperature stress. Leaf rolling is common and uneven, stunted corn growth is widespread. Moreover, most of these stressed corn fields are at a stage of development th ...

  7. Seeking a Twospotted Spider Mite Trial Location

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/seeking-twospotted-spider-mite-trial-location

    As we mentioned in a previous newsletter article, there is a product newly labeled for spider mite control in soybean and sweet corn (Agri-Mek SC).  We would like to test this product in Ohio soybeans, and are looking for a producer field for this trial.  ...

  8. Marestail Control in Wheat Stubble- Part 2: Cover Crop Considerations

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/marestail-control-wheat-stubble-part-2-cover-crop-considerations

    Following last week’s article about marestail control in wheat stubble, a number of people asked about options where cover crops are going to be planted later this summer.  The options can be fewer for this situation, especially for small-seeded broadleaf ...

  9. Data Retention and Availability –The Big Data Confusion: Part 11

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/data-retention-and-availability-%E2%80%93-big-data-confusion-part-11

    Data retention policies represent a set of guidelines that outlines data will be archived, how long it will be kept, how it will be removed, and either destructed or returned to the farmer.  The American Farm Bureau Federation’s “ Privacy and Security Pri ...

  10. Mining Ohio Historic Data that went into Tri-State Recommendations

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2016-08/mining-ohio-historic-data-went-tri-state-recommendations

    The Tri-State Fertilizer Recommendations, published in 1995, provided a unified soil fertility framework between Michigan, Ohio and Indiana. These recommendations are based on, “field calibration and correlation studies that have been conducted over the p ...

Pages