Wheat Pete's Word, Sept 2: more wonky weather, grain in storage, and allelopathy

게시됨 2020년 9월 2일

Tridge 요약

This article highlights the weather conditions in Ontario, noting both the hot temperatures and varying rainfall amounts across the region. Agriculturally, it discusses the potential for early bean combining, concerns of dry bean burn-dots, and issues with Indian mealmoth in stored wheat. It also provides recommendations for planting and managing winter crops, including adjusting seeding rates and being aware of allelopathic effects from previous cover crops, particularly from rye. Additionally, it mentions research on the allelopathic properties of rye, triticale, and wheat, noting rye as the most allelopathic.
면책 조항: 위의 요약은 정보 제공 목적으로 Tridge 자체 학습 AI 모델에 의해 생성되었습니다.

원본 콘텐츠

In agronomy — as with most things in life — it can be important to put things into perspective and to always ask if you’re not sure of the answer. In this week’s Wheat Pete’s Word, RealAgriculture’s resident agronomist Peter Johnson gives us an overview of Ontario’s precipitation, some wheat problem solving (of course), and a quick breakdown of research out of the Denmark, Norway, and Sweden area that addresses why a crop after rye might not look so hot. Have a question you’d like Johnson to address or some yield results to send in? Disagree with something he’s said? Leave him a message at 1-844-540-2014, send him a tweet (@wheatpete), or email him at [email protected] SUMMARY It’s been hot! In 2020, there’s been 28 days recorded at Nature Nut Nick’s weather station, at over 30 degrees celsius. Not the record though. It’s an average year in total heat unit accumulation. May was pretty cool, July was well above normal for heat. Is it early to be combining edible beans? Not that ...
출처: Real Ag

더 깊이 있는 인사이트가 필요하신가요?

귀사의 비즈니스에 맞춤화된 상세한 시장 분석 정보를 받아보세요.
'쿠키 허용'을 클릭하면 통계 및 개인 선호도 산출을 위한 쿠키 제공에 동의하게 됩니다. 개인정보 보호정책에서 쿠키에 대한 자세한 내용을 확인할 수 있습니다.