Corn |
In mid-August,
USDA-NASS made their initial corn yield projections for the 2016 season.
However, September is really the month when we project how our farming
skills and previous decisions come together to produce a corn crop. By
this time, yield becomes secondary because the season and growth of the
crop is largely over. A lot can still happen, but the focus of many
decisions are based upon plant and grain moisture.
During
the September, the crop has usually dented and the kernel milkline is
progressing towards the kernel tip. Physiological maturity is reached
when all kernels on the ear have attained their dry matter maximum
accumulation. Eventually a black abscission layer forms indicating that
moisture and nutrient transport from the plant has ceased. Once
physiological maturity (R6-Black layer) is achieved it is a physical
process to dry the grain down to a harvest moisture between 20 and 25%.
Husk
leaves turn color and ears begin to droop. Most modern hybrids have the
stay-green trait which allows for better stalk quality and standability
in the field. High yielding years often put stress on the plant due to
“stalk cannibalization” where nutrients are translocated to developing
kernels at the expense of stalk health.
Figure 1. Normal Pattern of Corn Forage and Grain Development
September
is the month when corn silage is harvested in Wisconsin. Silage
choppers put a lot of material through a relatively small opening
cutting (or shredding) plants to 3/4 inch TLC along with kernel
processing to break kernels. Usually the window to harvest corn silage
is about 7 to 14 days depending upon the maturities of the hybrids
selected at planting. Owning your own chopper provides more flexibility
for timing harvest. If dealing with custom silage choppers it is
imperative to communicate accurately the whole plant moisture of your
fields and the rate of drydown. Adjustments to silage moisture can still
occur by raising or lowering the cutter bar because the driest part of
the plant is the grain.
During September, dry
grain is usually not ready for safe storage; it needs to be at 13-15%
moisture for long-term storage. It may be advantageous to let crop
partially dry in the field.
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