Patrick another great job. In my younger Bird Dog life i hunted on small family Farms . 4 squares or less in Iowa. Pottawatamie County farmers would brag about 60 bushels. I would take vacation to drive the Combines for free. I was amazed with floating bean heads an GPS guidance. Proud of what you do. I am picking and planting 3 market gardens now. My heirloom Tomato`s are awesome in this drought.
I planted Asgrow XF57 here in Southeast North Carolina and it a potential yielder this year..looks really promising..thanks for the great information Patrick..
Thanks for watching. It was a 19 minute video and I didn’t think people would watch that long in one sitting so I broke it into 2 videos. To much good info from Jason that couldn’t be edited out to make video shorter.
That was very interesting. I remember my family planting soybeans in the mid 80’s and that’s the only time they planted them. That was very informative, thanks for taking the time to share with us!
Indeterminate beans are the way to go on full season beans. If you have the equipment set up you can really push them. In furrow, 2x2, burn them down with herbicides to make the nodes on branches stack closer, folliar feed with micros and in our area manganese to fill the beans out fatter, plant growth regulators, fungicides. So many possibilities but alot to learn. Crop is only as good as your shadow in the feild. Thanks for the content
Learning alot the past couple of years. Just trying to put it all together. Want to really push double crop soybeans after wheat/ poverty grass. Consistent 60+ bu double crop beans is the goal.
It’s been that way here in west TN for decades. Folks would work up their cotton ground and plant until May the 35th then put the unplanted cotton ground into soybeans. Now, folks are planting mid April soybeans. Most folks would use Gramoxone + Reflex pre-plant so they had a safety net to fall back on soybeans into intended cotton acres. I haven’t seen Reflex used much since 2016 when dicamba cottonseed /soybeans hit the market.
May 35th 😂. Same story here. Dicamba has been a game changer for sure, but still a lot of Reflex getting sprayed around here. Thanks for the comment John
35-40 bushel bean country here, east central Minnesota. Tough soil,tough climate. 1.2 -1.4 is a longer day bean. A .7-.9 would be just as common and yield just as good. I'm excited to see what we can do this year with foliar feed, good strip till program, and sap testing.
I didn’t know the numbers went that low! I thought 2 or 3 was the lowest. Most farmers plant a 7 or 8 here. Those were 5.3 and 5.4. I have ordered 4.8 for this year.
@@PatrickShivers I'm in a part of minnesota that most people consider cabin and recreational. Growing up the end of row crop production was about eleven miles north of us.
@@ronbaxley8105 McLean county Illinois has the highest yield average per acre of any county in the US. Their average is 71. Which means more than half the beans grown in the highest yielding place in the country yield less than 75 bushels. 75 bushels is more than double the state average in most states, which means most of the beans grown in the US are no where near 75 bushels.
Dude i remember beans doing 65 in the 90's before traits! Beans havent changed near like corn in the last 30 yrs! They need to breed them so they dont dry down below 13 percent that would help a ton
There are multiple people in Georgia (where I am at) that are recording 200+ bushel yields in soybeans. The input costs of doing so eliminates profit though.
I have some property in Quitman county. I was going to plant some soybeans for my deer plots. I was wondering when do you think i should plant and how deep should i plant them?? They are Eagle plot envy brand. Your info on this would be great!1 Thanks!!!
Anytime now is fine. Dept is according to conditions. You can get the area prepped, and if it is super dry, dust the beans in 3/4-1”. If they are in light moisture they will rot. If it rains 3/10s they will rot. If it rains 7/10s you’ll likely get a good stand. If you could plant them in good moisture a couple days before a rain event then you will likely have a good stand. If they experience moisture and then dry out before sprouting and making it to surface they will rot.
Get u some don Mario beans great genetics have always been our best beans they have several different varieties but u won't be disappointed there usually our best beans and know other farmers in different regions that they say the same thing have u ever planted any?
We name the varieties in the “secrets to massive soybean yield (Part 1)” video and talk about their differences at length. Their names are also written on the signs we’re standing next to.
Can't you go through the field and pull those rogue plants and separate them plant by plant and do a study on each plant for genetics? Just starting class and I'm a 65 year old student.
Farmers are not aloud to save any genetically altered seed. Asgrow (Bayer) owns the technology contained in the seeds’ DNA. The Asgrow rep told me in this video or the Part 1 video that those seeds won’t reproduce rogue plants at a different rate than any of the other seeds.
Patrick another great job. In my younger Bird Dog life i hunted on small family Farms . 4 squares or less in Iowa. Pottawatamie County farmers would brag about 60 bushels. I would take vacation to drive the Combines for free. I was amazed with floating bean heads an GPS guidance. Proud of what you do. I am picking and planting 3 market gardens now. My heirloom Tomato`s are awesome in this drought.
I planted Asgrow XF57 here in Southeast North Carolina and it a potential yielder this year..looks really promising..thanks for the great information Patrick..
Thanks for watching. It was a 19 minute video and I didn’t think people would watch that long in one sitting so I broke it into 2 videos. To much good info from Jason that couldn’t be edited out to make video shorter.
That was very interesting. I remember my family planting soybeans in the mid 80’s and that’s the only time they planted them. That was very informative, thanks for taking the time to share with us!
Thanks for watching Jack. It was to much good info to edit any out that’s why I made it into 2 videos.
Indeterminate beans are the way to go on full season beans. If you have the equipment set up you can really push them. In furrow, 2x2, burn them down with herbicides to make the nodes on branches stack closer, folliar feed with micros and in our area manganese to fill the beans out fatter, plant growth regulators, fungicides. So many possibilities but alot to learn. Crop is only as good as your shadow in the feild. Thanks for the content
Lots of info in your post! Thank you for watching/commenting!
Learning alot the past couple of years. Just trying to put it all together. Want to really push double crop soybeans after wheat/ poverty grass. Consistent 60+ bu double crop beans is the goal.
@@ncpanther consistent double crop 60 bushel beans will earn a living.
@ncpanther I would like more info on the burn down to make the nodes stack closer. Is there a link you could share?
It’s been that way here in west TN for decades. Folks would work up their cotton ground and plant until May the 35th then put the unplanted cotton ground into soybeans. Now, folks are planting mid April soybeans. Most folks would use Gramoxone + Reflex pre-plant so they had a safety net to fall back on soybeans into intended cotton acres. I haven’t seen Reflex used much since 2016 when dicamba cottonseed /soybeans hit the market.
May 35th 😂. Same story here. Dicamba has been a game changer for sure, but still a lot of Reflex getting sprayed around here. Thanks for the comment John
Really enjoy these soybeans videos. We do corn soybeans and sorghum here in southern Mexico.
I had some late Sorghum (planted behind peas) last year. Harvested in January.
Hello, Patrick! Rich beans thanking the good care...
I've never seen soybeans that tall! Good job Patrick!!!
Thanks Cole!
35-40 bushel bean country here, east central Minnesota. Tough soil,tough climate.
1.2 -1.4 is a longer day bean. A .7-.9 would be just as common and yield just as good.
I'm excited to see what we can do this year with foliar feed, good strip till program, and sap testing.
I didn’t know the numbers went that low! I thought 2 or 3 was the lowest. Most farmers plant a 7 or 8 here. Those were 5.3 and 5.4. I have ordered 4.8 for this year.
@@PatrickShivers I'm in a part of minnesota that most people consider cabin and recreational. Growing up the end of row crop production was about eleven miles north of us.
Thanks sir
Stopped milking cows a few years ago, planted the farm to beans first time ever, monitor never went under 100 bushels. Good fertility grows good beans
😳
Absolutely gorgeous sky to shoot a video under.
As you know, we live in God’s country.
I would for sure hand pick those monster beans
Here in the piedmont of North Carolina. We grow 4 and 5 years ago we grew 6 and 7 we make better yields with 4 and 5
Seems like all the record yields come from 4s. 5s and 8s are the next best in all the trials I looked at.
Now days my grower clients think a 75bu bean yield is trash.
@@ronbaxley8105 McLean county Illinois has the highest yield average per acre of any county in the US. Their average is 71. Which means more than half the beans grown in the highest yielding place in the country yield less than 75 bushels. 75 bushels is more than double the state average in most states, which means most of the beans grown in the US are no where near 75 bushels.
Dude i remember beans doing 65 in the 90's before traits! Beans havent changed near like corn in the last 30 yrs! They need to breed them so they dont dry down below 13 percent that would help a ton
There are multiple people in Georgia (where I am at) that are recording 200+ bushel yields in soybeans. The input costs of doing so eliminates profit though.
Good looking bean crop!!What row width are you and do you run a strip till unit?Here in central Nc 20-30 bushels is about average!!
36” rows. Subsoiler pulled at angle across field then field cultivated smooth and flat.
Just because it makes it’s own N doesn’t mean it doesn’t need it to start. Big gains there to get it started right
Peanuts also make (a LOT) of N but I have heard of some situations where N was applied at or pre-plant and really pushed some high peanut yields.
YOU ARE WORTHY OF BEING A FARMER !!!
Thank you!
I have some property in Quitman county. I was going to plant some soybeans for my deer plots. I was wondering when do you think i should plant and how deep should i plant them?? They are Eagle plot envy brand. Your info on this would be great!1 Thanks!!!
Anytime now is fine. Dept is according to conditions. You can get the area prepped, and if it is super dry, dust the beans in 3/4-1”. If they are in light moisture they will rot. If it rains 3/10s they will rot. If it rains 7/10s you’ll likely get a good stand. If you could plant them in good moisture a couple days before a rain event then you will likely have a good stand. If they experience moisture and then dry out before sprouting and making it to surface they will rot.
74 bu per acre on the outskirts of Carrollton Mo.
channel seed.
74 bu is some great beans!
Get u some don Mario beans great genetics have always been our best beans they have several different varieties but u won't be disappointed there usually our best beans and know other farmers in different regions that they say the same thing have u ever planted any?
@@kymcfarlin8948 never heard of them. I will check into it
Super sir 🎉🎉but your language not understand us..plse write on paper it show us..we screen shot take
Looks like someone going to be buying a new tractor or pickup truck
I need a self propelled butterbean harvester.
Name of the variety please.
We name the varieties in the “secrets to massive soybean yield (Part 1)” video and talk about their differences at length. Their names are also written on the signs we’re standing next to.
Can't you go through the field and pull those rogue plants and separate them plant by plant and do a study on each plant for genetics? Just starting class and I'm a 65 year old student.
Farmers are not aloud to save any genetically altered seed. Asgrow (Bayer) owns the technology contained in the seeds’ DNA. The Asgrow rep told me in this video or the Part 1 video that those seeds won’t reproduce rogue plants at a different rate than any of the other seeds.
Howdy Patrick
Thanks for watching Tug
Still saying 80- 85 bushels.
I’ll be satisfied with 70, happy with anything over.