Home / Archives for September 2015 / Page 2
-
After a drought-stressed summer in many areas of the Prairies, canola plants may have a lingering hormone response that can cause seed sprouting (above) in the pods and regrowth of cut plants…
-
Ideally, growers will want to put canola on aeration as soon as it comes of the field. Cooling hot grain within the first 24 hours is important for safe long-term storage. Removing moisture that sweats from all canola — but especially tough canola (10-12% moisture) — is also important. Conditioning achieves both of these steps. Here are a few handy…
-
Here are the 10 “most clicked” September articles from the past three years 1. High green. Will it clear? 2. Frost in the forecast. Swath now or leave it standing? 3. Fall weed control on fields planned for canola next year 4. Fall weed control product options 5. How much canola does your combine throw over? 6. Top 10 tips…
-
Three concepts to consider while setting the combine this harvest: (1) Can dockage be too low? (2) Change combine settings based on crop conditions. (3) Frost damaged seed might not be a total write off…
-
Reseeding looked like the right idea in many areas throughout the summer, but the real test is at harvest. If there was no risk of frost and the significant loss……
-
Harvest is a great time to assess the incidence and severity of canola diseases, an important step in management for next year. Post-swathing disease scouting is possible but results are not as accurate as pre-swath scouting…
-
Yes, keep going. The recommendation to wait at least 4-6 hours after a frost to assess the extent of frost damage only applies to canola that was not quite ready to swath. If you were already swathing or were going to swath a crop that day, there is no benefit to waiting…
-
Have you seen patterns like this? Potassium in swathed crop is mobile and if several rainfall events fall on the swath before combining, potassium will bleed out below the swath. Since a six-foot swath contains all the straw from a 30-foot or wider cut, the K is concentrated. K-loving crops following canola can find sufficient K below the swath, but…
-
Moist conditions mean more soil clinging to machinery wheels. This increases the risk of moving clubroot as well as weed seeds and insect pupae around the farm. With the discovery of a potential new clubroot pathotype, growers will want to take time to sanitize equipment between fields…