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  1. Adapting Burndown Herbicide Programs to Wet Weather Delays

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-11/adapting-burndown-herbicide-programs-wet-weather-delays

    While it’s not terribly late yet, the wet soils and wet forecast could keep most of us out of the fields for a while.  The questions about how to deal with burndown herbicide treatments in delayed planting situations are rolling in.  One of the most commo ...

  2. The Soil Food Web

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-11/soil-food-web

    Co-Author:  Vinayak Shedekar, Postdoctoral Researcher OSU A healthy soil depends on the interaction of many organisms that make up the soil food web.  These organisms live all or part of their life cycle in the soil and are responsible for converting ener ...

  3. NW Ohio Producers Can Get Paid for Growing Perennial Forage

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-10/nw-ohio-producers-can-get-paid-growing-perennial-forage-0

    The Ohio Department of Agriculture recently announced a new conservation program entitled the "Ohio Working Lands Buffer Program"  to establish year-round vegetative cover on eligible cropland in the Western Lake Erie Basin Watershed.  This is a ...

  4. Corn Management Practices for Later Planting Dates – Changes to Consider

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-10/corn-management-practices-later-planting-dates-%E2%80%93-changes-consider

    As prospects for a timely start to spring planting diminish, growers need to reassess their planting strategies and consider adjustments. Since delayed planting reduces the yield potential of corn, the foremost attention should be given to management prac ...

  5. Dealing with Winter Injured Forage Stands

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-10/dealing-winter-injured-forage-stands

    I’ve been hearing more reports from around the state of winter injured forage stands, especially in alfalfa. The saturated soil during much of the winter took its toll, with winter heaving being quite severe in many areas of the state. So, what should be ...

  6. Establishing New Forage Stands

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-10/establishing-new-forage-stands

    This month provides one of the two preferred times to seed perennial cool-season forages, the other being late summer. Two primary difficulties with spring plantings are finding a good window of opportunity when soils are dry enough before it gets too lat ...

  7. Improving Conditions for May

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-10/improving-conditions-may

    After a cool and wet period for April as expected we still expect a turn toward warmer weather for May along with more normal rainfall. The outlook for the next two weeks going into early May, rainfall is forecast to average 1-3 inches with normal being 1 ...

  8. Soybean Cyst Nematode expands range in Ohio

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2014-04/soybean-cyst-nematode-expands-range-ohio

    Approximately every three years the map is updated where SCN is found in the US.  To do this task ...

  9. 2019-10

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-10

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  10. Winter Wheat Update

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/2019-04/winter-wheat-update

    Due to late planting and wet weather, winter wheat in some areas of the state has not yet emerged. In Ohio, we do not have first-hand experience with this situation. Further west (Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Kansas), there have been reports of winter wheat em ...

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