Wheat School: Five planting tips for great winter wheat

preview_player
Показать описание
It's time to plant winter wheat and we've asked Peter "Wheat Pete" Johnson to give us his top five planting recommendations on this episode of the RealAgriculture Wheat School.

Number 2 on Johnson's list is starter fertilizer: It's especially critical on lower testing soils (less than 15 ppm Olsen test) and on clay soils. In his research, the critical P soil test on truly heavy clay is significantly higher than on loams or sands. "Even at soil test levels as high as 35 ppm, we still saw large yield increases to starter fertilizer on heavy clay," he notes. "Banding is always best, it takes 4X the amount broadcast to get about 80 percent of the yield gain of seed placed, and our data says broadcast will not equal banded on clay."

Seed rate is number 3. Johnson says: "Match your seeding rate to your planting date — on clay start at 1.2 million seeds per acre if you are 10 days prior to the optimum window, 1.8 million in the optimum window, and 2.4 million if you are 10 days late."

Fall weed control checks in at number 4 on Johnson's list. Whether growers burn down or use an in-crop fall herbicide, fall weed control is almost the only time weed control increases yield in winter wheat. Spring applications are for harvest ease only, notes Johnson.

Last on the list is seeding depth. "This is most critical on clay soils, as shallow planting makes you more prone to frost heave," says Johnson.  "Aim for 1 to 1.5 inches. However, if the dry weather forecast is true and holds, you may have to go deeper to find moisture. On heavy clay soil, some falls we have had to seed wheat 3 inches deep to find moisture. But into moisture is a win, even at 3 inches deep, unless it rains within the first few days after you plant. Only go deep if it is dry."

#agriculture #farming
Find us on our other social media platforms:
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

food plotter in northeast mi. I used a chicken manure based fertilizer at planting and its shocking how much better it looks compared to the past years without fert. wheat Pete needs to put out some food plot videos. :)

travissmith-wznc
Автор

wow just amazing to me that you plant 3 inches deep! Even half that depth just destroys our yields here on irrigated ground in idaho. It's all about meeting the moisture here. We irrigate and plant into the best moisture possible, which hopefully allows us to plant so that seed is just barely covered...1/4 inch or even less. The shallower the long as we can maintain enough moisture to germinate the seed. I'm hoping we can crack 200 bushels per acre next year.

beebe
Автор

Question... Can planting to early be risky from being killed by the cold of winter if the wheat grows to fast in a warm fall like we're experiencing?

rollincoal
Автор

I have a question for Pete, do you not have issues with the Frit Fly (Oscinella Frit), or WSMV and the wheat curl mite? I saw a 80% yield reduction this year after a widespread WSMV infection. I'm on the other side of the world but last couple of years November planted crops yield better than October planted crops, when 15-20 years ago the best yields were with September planted crops.

Yofarms