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Grain Harvest Moving Along, Ohio River Damages Some Fields | |
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Most of these crops, primarily late-planted soybeans, will be harvestable but will suffer yield damage. Clint Hardy, Daviess County Extension agent for agriculture and natural resources |
By Laura Skillman PRINCETON, Low-lying grain fields along
the Most of these crops, primarily late-planted soybeans, will be harvestable but will suffer yield damage, said Clint Hardy, Daviess County Extension agent for agriculture and natural resources with the University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service. The worst part is that for many of these same farmers, this is the second lost crop in these same fields in one year, he said. Thanks to an early spring, many of these fields had been planted in corn, only to be washed out due to flooding in late May and early June resulting in replanting in soybeans that aren’t yet ready for harvest. Had the corn crop not been flooded, these fields would have been harvested prior to last week’s flooding, Hardy noted. Flooding wasn’t as severe as expected, thanks to the river cresting below the anticipated level and quickly dropping, said Mike Smith, Henderson County Extension agent for agriculture and natural resources. Smith said yield losses from water could be anywhere from 5 to 40 bushels per acre on beans that will be harvestable. Elsewhere, Hardy said Soybeans are expected to yield 41 bushels per acre, down two bushels from last year’s record-high level. Across the state and even within some counties, soybeans range from ready to harvest, to dropping leaves, to still green. Early planted soybeans are yielding well, while dry conditions in the west could hurt late planted and double cropped beans. -30- Writer: Laura Skillman 270-365-7541 ext. 278 Sources: Clint Hardy, 270-685-8480; Mike Smith, 270-826-8387 Return to Main News page. |