2025 field work

ISUAgronomist

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Nov 5, 2009
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On the farm, IA
Captan was a major product for Stauffer Chemical especially in California and the fruit and nuts groves.

Stauffer also had Sutan, Dyfonate and Eradacane. Their plastics division created what is now known as Roundup but thought it was too hot of a product and didn’t think it would ever be approved by the EPA so they sold it to Monsanto
They didn't sell glysophate to Monsanto. There was a huge IP lawsuit between the two on who invented it and Stauffer lost as they didn't develop it as a herbicide. Family member worked for Stauffer at the time and one of my graduate committee members was subpoenaed as a material witness.
 

Turn2

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May 12, 2011
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Clusterfunkeny
They didn't sell glysophate to Monsanto. There was a huge IP lawsuit between the two on who invented it and Stauffer lost as they didn't develop it as a herbicide. Family member worked for Stauffer at the time and one of my graduate committee members was subpoenaed as a material witness.
Seems like there were similar issues with resistance genes. I just don't recall any details though, except I think DEKALB was one party involved.
 

cydnote

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Oct 24, 2023
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Grew up in a family of 8 and always had a LARGE garden--to the extent that between canning and freezing we put up over 500 qts. per year (my mom kept a journal). It was just part of (my) life back then.

Retired from farming, the garden is one of my few ties to yesteryear and I still enjoy canning the excess and even though some of it doesn't make sense economically there is some comfort in knowing how your food was handled and what it will taste like when you open a jar.

My wife developed a rare form of gastroparesis and is extremely limited on what she can consume. She makes her own ketchup from tomato paste that I can, mostly on instant potatoes from the store as she can't eat the ones I raise. (she can't do meat in any form).

My canning thus far has been 18 pints of pickled beets, 20 pints of green beans, and 15 quarts of home grown peaches. Tomato canning is yet to get underway as the Amish Paste I raise are a later variety.
 

cyphoon

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Sep 8, 2011
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whats your opinion on white sweetcorn? we have a new.. its a growing market (latin/middle east).... one of the best tasting i've ever had. sweet but you know its corn.... thoughts?

We have planted some white sweetcorn in our gardens and it has been pretty good. Glacial was the last variety we tried, and I think we planted Silver King about 10 years ago. Glacial was really good, and produced huge ears.

Genetically, seed color has nothing to do with flavor, but some people are convinced that "peaches n' cream" is the best sweet corn ever made. And when they say "peaches n' cream", they mean every bi color variety of sweet corn ever produced. Others are convinced that all yellow is best. Might take some education to convince people that white sweet corn is ready to eat.

Old timey story. In the 70s and 80s, my dad would plant some end rows to sweet corn. Yeah, you aren't supposed to plant sweet corn right next to field corn, but whatever. One year, probably 1985 or so, he sent me and my 2 brothers out to pick some corn that he thought it would be ready. We came back and reported that it wasn't ready. The kernels were still white. Few days later, we repeated the effort with the same conclusion. Sweet corn isn't ready.

Finally, after a week of this or so, I decided to just pick it. The ears were fat and kernels were plump and shot white cream when pinched (easy fellas, not everything has to be innuendo). It looked like it would be too far gone if left for another couple days. Maybe 1 in 10 kernels were yellow, and I figured I would just take a bag in and see what pa had to say. My brothers ridiculed me. "It isn't ready, it is still white!"

Well, when dad saw the ears, he agreed it looked ready. Then he thought for a bit, and said "come to think of it, the seed dealer did say this sweetcorn would have a mix of white and yellow kernels." Best sweetcorn we had ever had to that point.

H
 

dafarmer

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Mar 17, 2012
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SW Iowa
Froze sweet corn yesterday, what raccoons didn’t trash: heavy rain coming this morning. 1.5” of rain in an hour.
 
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cowboycurtis

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Jul 20, 2006
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Been doing yield checks this week. Everything has been between 230-270. You can really tell who has tile, sidedressed more N and sprayed fungicide. Their crop is going to be massive. This is in most of Hamilton county.
 

Stormin

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Apr 11, 2006
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Going to see a lot more "iron herbicide" programs I think.

IMO producers will look at using a strategy of weed control with chemicals that still kill water hemp. And rotate those chemicals so water hemp doesn’t get resistance to the chemicals that still give control. The resistance in water hemp is largely due to farmers using glyphosate almost exclusively for control.

We will not go back to row cultivation in any big way IMO.
 

ISUAgronomist

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Nov 5, 2009
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On the farm, IA
IMO producers will look at using a strategy of weed control with chemicals that still kill water hemp. And rotate those chemicals so water hemp doesn’t get resistance to the chemicals that still give control. The resistance in water hemp is largely due to farmers using glyphosate almost exclusively for control.

We will not go back to row cultivation in any big way IMO.
Lol. There isn't much left that controls waterhemp and pretty much all of those are being used in both corn and soybeans.
 

ISU22CY

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Dec 15, 2012
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Iowa
That doesn’t work very good for us strip till guys
I feel you on that!

I will say the I never have any issues with the stuff between the rows in strip till... it's right on the outside edge of the strip. Part of me wants to narrow up how wide of a strip I make but on the other hand a larger strip is easier to stay on and warms up that much quicker.
 
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ISU22CY

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Dec 15, 2012
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Iowa
IMO producers will look at using a strategy of weed control with chemicals that still kill water hemp. And rotate those chemicals so water hemp doesn’t get resistance to the chemicals that still give control. The resistance in water hemp is largely due to farmers using glyphosate almost exclusively for control.

We will not go back to row cultivation in any big way IMO.
Waterhemp is resistant to much more than glyphosate where I'm at.

By rotate you mean the local coop corn program one year and the soybean program the next year sure I guess that's true as far as rotating goes.
 

Stormin

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Apr 11, 2006
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Waterhemp is resistant to much more than glyphosate where I'm at.

By rotate you mean the local coop corn program one year and the soybean program the next year sure I guess that's true as far as rotating goes.

I mean using like a pre-emergent herbicide with one mode of action and follow post emerge with different modes of action. And in a corn soybean rotation using different modes of action in the next corn crop following soybeans then use different modes of action action and mix up the modes of action in soybeans and different modes of action in each soybean crop year. And spray very early when weeds are small.

IMO there will be more continued herbicide developments and options for strategies versus going back to row crop cultivation. Row crop cultivation does not remove weeds in the row. It will just eliminate weeds in between the row. Plus row crop cultivation leads to increased soil erosion. It is a tool that some might use as another type of action in addition to different modes of action. But row crop cultivation is not a solution to resistant water hemp control.
 

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