The best secret to great beans yields I ever found was 2.5 tons of litter disked deep in the fall plant in rye cover. Burn down rye early and plant beans no till with any extra micros needed at planting. It continues to produce the best bean yields I’ve been involved with. You still have to work/adjust all the other factors. Plant early as you can, adjust ph, proper weed control, treat for white mold if needed, etc, you no all the proper steps
That definitely sounds like it would work in some areas. Where I farm is mostly red clay. No till is 100% not an option. We do strip till cotton and soybeans into cover crops with great success though. We use to use 2 tons of litter on every acre we farm until litter prices rose to equal actual fertilizer. The litter down here is also always filled with pigweed seed.
@@PatrickShivers fall bottom plowed litter or hog slurry around here is a excellent option with Soybeans in my opinion, and no till isn’t hit everyone one. We use the heavy rye cover after but down to block a lot if the weed pressure but pig weed and amaranth in the South especially South East is very hard to control, we use a mechanical weed pulled 8 row that mechanically pulls all weed taker then the crop or soybeans and it will eliminate pig weed and other tall weeds in one year if you pull them all, it has roller belts similar to a round bailer to pinch and pull out tall weeds before they reseed by gripping them and the speed of the belts pulls the root and all right out. I might have a video of one or could locate a video on You Tube if you want to see one work. You could probably make one in a shop once you saw it run.
@@blakegibson2654 great info Blake. I haven’t heard of the mechanical weed pulled I will definitely seek out some videos of it. We kill pigweeds here with Dicamba. It can only be sprayed on corn, soybeans, or cotton. It requires perfect conditions during application, (and for hours afterwards) as it will lift back up and travel down the road, then sit down on someone else’s field….that may have peanuts ☠️
Hey Patrick I’m from India and I want to get insights from you about all details of your farming of soybean. We get hardly 10 quintal per acre. Looking to hear from you
Soybeans need preplant incorporated fertilizer (or fertilizer beside the row at planting) no weeds competing for nutrients and moisture, and the ground under them must stay moist. Once the plants are big enough to shade out ground it is easier to keep it moist.
How about you collect those “rogue plants and send them to me” I’ll buy those seeds just to look at the biology and nutrients contained in each compared to the average. I bet there is a dramatic difference.
If every plant made that many pods soybean prices would plummet. More supply = less demand. The way to make profit is to figure out how to make just your plants make that many.
These are Asgrow 53. I have a full length video showing the official recording of the yield and the varieties (there were 2 varieties in the field). Yield was 76 bushels per US acre.
Old gene ? Why I say ( btw I’m no expert ) is soybeans were bush beans in its beginning like butter beans and snaps . I to have seen them in the fields around here. Taller than the rest . Like a basketball player next to us lol !
The problem to do it by bean count is that bean size can vary so much from field to field, variety, or year to year. Seed Salesmen around her say for very 3 bean pod, or every 3 beans you get 1 bushel per acre. Never tested that, I have fond it by weight, grab 4 plates in 3 different areas if the field. Find a average weight of beans and count per place. Average bean weight per plant multiplied time plant population decided by 60 (assuming a 60 pound bushel) Gives you great estimate of yield per Acre.
I break down a similar formula in my “secret to massive soybean yield part 1” video. Pods per plant x beans per pod x plants per acre divided by beans per pound divided by pounds in bushel gives rough estimate
@@PatrickShivers At the KMC booth. I was the UA-camr on the other side. Lol we talked about the rip/roller. Should have went over the peanut combine with you. It's a picking machine. Hopefully some of your neighbors will share some good news about it.
@@dannybennett7483 I’m going to post an entire video from the KMC booth. I had to much footage from the day to put it all in one video. You’ll be on UA-cam (my side) next week.
@@dannybennett7483check out my latest short “catastrophe on the farm”. Spindle broke on Amadas picker today and machine fell frame to the ground. Wheel is broke, lots of bent metal. If KMC wants a couple videos demonstrating one of their pickers in action now would be an opportune time to send one. I got about 25 acres left. They are irrigated and loaded.
@@PatrickShivers would you believe I did have a Demo 7406 until about 1:00 o clock today. I was gonna get it moved to another place and then it was sold. I would have loved to picked them last 25 acres with it. And I really believed you would have loved it too. It's been a great machine. Some are getting done and some are just starting this is going to be a long season. I will see if I can find someone over your way that might help.
The best secret to great beans yields I ever found was 2.5 tons of litter disked deep in the fall plant in rye cover. Burn down rye early and plant beans no till with any extra micros needed at planting. It continues to produce the best bean yields I’ve been involved with. You still have to work/adjust all the other factors. Plant early as you can, adjust ph, proper weed control, treat for white mold if needed, etc, you no all the proper steps
That definitely sounds like it would work in some areas. Where I farm is mostly red clay. No till is 100% not an option. We do strip till cotton and soybeans into cover crops with great success though. We use to use 2 tons of litter on every acre we farm until litter prices rose to equal actual fertilizer. The litter down here is also always filled with pigweed seed.
@@PatrickShivers fall bottom plowed litter or hog slurry around here is a excellent option with Soybeans in my opinion, and no till isn’t hit everyone one. We use the heavy rye cover after but down to block a lot if the weed pressure but pig weed and amaranth in the South especially South East is very hard to control, we use a mechanical weed pulled 8 row that mechanically pulls all weed taker then the crop or soybeans and it will eliminate pig weed and other tall weeds in one year if you pull them all, it has roller belts similar to a round bailer to pinch and pull out tall weeds before they reseed by gripping them and the speed of the belts pulls the root and all right out. I might have a video of one or could locate a video on You Tube if you want to see one work. You could probably make one in a shop once you saw it run.
@@blakegibson2654 great info Blake. I haven’t heard of the mechanical weed pulled I will definitely seek out some videos of it. We kill pigweeds here with Dicamba. It can only be sprayed on corn, soybeans, or cotton. It requires perfect conditions during application, (and for hours afterwards) as it will lift back up and travel down the road, then sit down on someone else’s field….that may have peanuts ☠️
Hey Patrick
I’m from India and I want to get insights from you about all details of your farming of soybean. We get hardly 10 quintal per acre. Looking to hear from you
Soybeans need preplant incorporated fertilizer (or fertilizer beside the row at planting) no weeds competing for nutrients and moisture, and the ground under them must stay moist. Once the plants are big enough to shade out ground it is easier to keep it moist.
Hey man straight leg Levi's a fresh tee shirt but num.1 is those river boots I'm getting planted in mine thank ya!!!!!!
😂 They are mostly boot cut wranglers, but close enough.
Would be interesting to see what a field of rouge plants would yield!
Amen! It would have to be 150+
How about you collect those “rogue plants and send them to me” I’ll buy those seeds just to look at the biology and nutrients contained in each compared to the average. I bet there is a dramatic difference.
Patrick what did you do for fertility in those soybeans?
Field wide soil samples analyzed. Then broadcast called for rate and incorporated in preplant.
I think the record is well over 1000 pods on one plant.
@@brokeminer475 😳
Osm bro
252 pods wow!! Maybee the seed company can make a variety that has that many on every plant
If every plant made that many pods soybean prices would plummet. More supply = less demand. The way to make profit is to figure out how to make just your plants make that many.
@@PatrickShivers yeah
Wow
Thanks for watching Rainchild. I have 3 more recent videos documenting the harvest and the seed variety details/habits of these beans.
Available in india ?
I have full length videos detailing the variety and the yield at harvest. Look them up on my channel and contact your local seed rep.
@@PatrickShiverscan you send india soyabean seed
@@nwordsmartsolution8947 no. This variety has GMO technology, which means the grower cannot legally save/sell any seed.
Only semple 1kg@@PatrickShivers
@@nwordsmartsolution8947 this video is a year old. Those beans were harvested and sold 11 months ago
Hy bro I am Indian and your soyabin seeds need mi
Howdy Patrick
Howdy Tug
Du
Seeds available?
From Bayer Crop Sciences. Asgrow is their soybean seed line.
Seeds name
These are Asgrow 53. I have a full length video showing the official recording of the yield and the varieties (there were 2 varieties in the field). Yield was 76 bushels per US acre.
Give me Full Schedule of Soyabean Farming for High yield.. I m from India...🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching
Old gene ? Why I say ( btw I’m no expert ) is soybeans were bush beans in its beginning like butter beans and snaps . I to have seen them in the fields around here. Taller than the rest . Like a basketball player next to us lol !
Seed rep said they (Bayer Crop Sciences) can’t figure out/replicate on demand what makes the “rogue plants”
The problem to do it by bean count is that bean size can vary so much from field to field, variety, or year to year. Seed Salesmen around her say for very 3 bean pod, or every 3 beans you get 1 bushel per acre. Never tested that, I have fond it by weight, grab 4 plates in 3 different areas if the field. Find a average weight of beans and count per place. Average bean weight per plant multiplied time plant population decided by 60 (assuming a 60 pound bushel) Gives you great estimate of yield per Acre.
I break down a similar formula in my “secret to massive soybean yield part 1” video. Pods per plant x beans per pod x plants per acre divided by beans per pound divided by pounds in bushel gives rough estimate
Great yield Patrick! Congratulations my friend.
Thanks Greg
Thats crazy, 250, Wish you could get a entire field of that.
Me too 😂.
That plant was incredible.
Thanks Nezrom!
Hello, Patrick! Premium soybeans! Lots of patience...
Thanks for watching Luis!
@@PatrickShivers 👌
Looks like you can hang with the combine almost with your picking..lol
Meet you today at the expo.
Subscribed and 👍
Thanks for watching/subscribing Danny. I talked to a lot of people yesterday, what booth did we meet at?
@@PatrickShivers
At the KMC booth.
I was the UA-camr on the other side. Lol we talked about the rip/roller. Should have went over the peanut combine with you. It's a picking machine. Hopefully some of your neighbors will share some good news about it.
@@dannybennett7483 I’m going to post an entire video from the KMC booth. I had to much footage from the day to put it all in one video. You’ll be on UA-cam (my side) next week.
@@dannybennett7483check out my latest short “catastrophe on the farm”. Spindle broke on Amadas picker today and machine fell frame to the ground. Wheel is broke, lots of bent metal. If KMC wants a couple videos demonstrating one of their pickers in action now would be an opportune time to send one. I got about 25 acres left. They are irrigated and loaded.
@@PatrickShivers would you believe I did have a Demo 7406 until about 1:00 o clock today. I was gonna get it moved to another place and then it was sold. I would have loved to picked them last 25 acres with it. And I really believed you would have loved it too. It's been a great machine. Some are getting done and some are just starting this is going to be a long season. I will see if I can find someone over your way that might help.