In soybean fields, it is a different story. Bush says late season rains have helped finish the beans well and yields are better than expected, “Soybean yields across the board have been very good.” Bush said even some of the group 3 varieties were helped by the late summer rains and are yielding as good as the full season varieties, “Generally the fuller season soybeans you planted, the higher your yields.”
Some growers have finished up work for the year, others are doing fall fieldwork, and still others have planters rolling. “We have guys who are planting wheat right now,” Bush told HAT. He said there is still enough good weather left to get a wheat crop established. With $15 soybeans and $8 wheat, he said a soybean/wheat double crop can be very profitable.
Hoosier Ag Today would like to thank all the DuPont/Pioneer agronomists around the state for their outstanding job of keeping us all up to speed on crop conditions and crop development this year.
[audio:https://www.hoosieragtoday.com//wp-content/uploads//2012/11/SEharvest.mp3|titles=Harvest Lagging in SE Indiana]