All Posts from 2019

Biological products for soybeans are offered to growers from seed treatment, soil application and post applications all the way through to the reproductive stages. Biologicals, in general, are products created from natural solutions or synthetic equivalents. They can be broken down further into the use goal of the product:
  1. Biostimulants are used to enhance plant growth and development. These are often found in a seed...

We know that tractors are beginning to role and April is not an ideal time for a webinar. That's why for the first time, ILSoyAdvisor is offering an on-demand webinar that's convenient for your schedule. Whether it's first thing in the morning or after you've turned the shop lights off, be sure to watch Nathan Kleczewski's "Emerging and Reemerging Diseases in Soybeans" during April.

Kleczewski discusses two...

What is the best row spacing for soybeans: 7.5, 10, 15, 20 or 30 inches?

That is a question I got one morning in April. My short answer was: it depends. I have been tracking row spacing and yield on soybeans for 15 years now and my conclusion is that soybeans can yield similarly regardless of row spacing and narrow rows don’t always outyield wider rows.

Today row spacing for soybeans seems to be driven by the row spacing for...

When making production plans for this upcoming growing season, weed management should be at the forefront of your thoughts. In order to “start clean and stay clean” here are some important things to think about. What are your main weed problems? What are the life cycles of the problem weeds? What is the availability of equipment to ensure proper herbicide timing? What were the past herbicide programs and are there issues with herbicide...

We can sum up fall and winter, and now spring, in a few words; cold, wet, frustrating. While we still want to plant as early as possible, we need to consider the consequences, especially as they relate to soil compaction. Compaction creates all kinds of issues whether fall or spring. Filing in ruts creates extra work, whether in the fall or spring. Yield is the bottom line, and yield can definitely take a dive on compacted soils.  

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In the past, it was common to use herbicides that do NOT provide residual control for controlling weeds in soybeans. With the most popular herbicides we had at that time, we could let weeds grow and then control them with multiple herbicide passes. Today, with herbicide resistant waterhemp, I would suggest that we cannot allow waterhemp to even emerge from the ground because we cannot rely on those herbicide sites of action anymore....

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