King says the warmer temperatures as we enter June should help the late planted crop catch up, “Usually these later planted crops germinate faster in 5-7 days and get off to a healthy start with a minimum of disease pressure.” He added he is seeing even emergence and is optimistic the crop will get off to a good start even through it was planted late in May.
Yields, however, may have already been compromised. The old rule of thumb says 1 bpa loss for every day planted after May 15. “A lot of this crop got planted May 22 – 25, so we may have lost 7 to 10 bpa down from what we had expected the crop to yield,” said King.
One good thing may have come out of the late planting: Armyworm and cutworm pressure may have passed. “I have not seen any heavy pressure on either of those insects yet, much of the feeding activity may have already taken place before the crops emerged,” stated King. “So we may have really dodged a bullet with this later planting.”