The corn is now approaching 5 feet. It has grown almost 2 feet in the last 6 days. We've had over an inch of rain in the last week. They are forecasting more for tonight. We really could use more sunshine as we are now 5 days behind on growing degree units.
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Yesterday the weather was beautiful. Corn is really starting to take off. Rain is on its way today. It is thundering in the distance as I write this. June is still on the cool side. We are 64 GDUs (Growing Degree Units) behind normal for the month. A GDU is a measurement of heat units for corn. We should average about 20 GDUs each day. This puts us about 3 days behind average. I can believe it - our air conditioner has hardly been on this month. Tomorrow is the first day of Summer! Sunny & nice today. We put up the measuring stick yesterday, so now you should be able to watch the corn's progress. Right now it is about 2 feet tall. The ground dried out enough from all the rains that we were able to sidedress Nitrogen on some of our other fields this afternoon. Corn in this area looks really good, but I talked to a friend in Missouri today & they still can't get any soybeans planted and their corn is underwater due to all the rain they've been getting. I hear that much of the South is extremely wet. I hope they get a drier weather pattern soon. We had another 1.1" of rain this morning, bringing the total rainfall for the last 4 days to 4". Most of the fields right around here handled it pretty well, but I hear that there is water standing in fields west of here.
I'm working on painting a measuring stick so there will be better visual comparison in the field. Maybe I'll get it up tomorrow. Jim made it to Japan, but his luggage didn't. He tells me he went shopping on the equivalent of New York's "5th Ave" in Toyko for some new shirts and pants. That would be a "first" for this Iowa farmer! His luggage may never catch up to him. He met with leaders of one of Japan's largest Ag cooperatives this morning & this afternoon he was meeting with a commercial feed millers group. It is still raining & drizzling this morning. Jim is on his way to Japan on a US Grain's Council mission to represent Iowa farmers. He was supposed to be there by now, but yesterday's storms in Chicago messed up his flights. After spending 8 hours in the Cedar Rapids airport, he finally made it to Chicago, where he got to spend the night. He is now on his way to Japan. He's actually feeling a bit glad the forecast is for a lot of wet weather, so he doesn't have to feel guilty about missing out on good days suitable for fieldwork. Today's picture at noon. It poured last night. We ended up with a total of 2.8" of rain for the storm, and its been overcast & rainy all day. But we were lucky, some of the areas around us at 4 to 5" of rain. The traders like to think that "Rain makes Grain", but I've also seen plenty of times when too much rain as a bad as not enough rain. It's plenty wet in the field today, so I haven't been up to measure. There will not be any fieldwork in this neighborhood for a couple of days.
Since we are just getting this all up & running, this will be my first post. The corn has now been in the ground a little over 4 weeks and is already 20" tall. It has been hot this week, so the corn has grown a lot. It has grown about 12 inches in the last 6 days. It was "knee high" by June 10, so well ahead of the "knee high by the Fourth of July" benchmark. Actually, In today's farming world, knee high by the Fourth of June is much more common.
This field was not planted early for this area. Much of the corn was already in the ground by May 1 and this particular field was not planted till May 9. Even so, it isn't far behind those planted almost a month earlier. At this time the fertlizer is all on and the herbicides have been sprayed, so we can now sit back and watch the leaves wave at us and grow! Today it has been raining off and on all day. Wehave had .9" of rain since this morning. Maybe you can even see it when it is raining "cats & dogs." |
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