A Southwest Ohio farmer says some fields in his region still have standing water from the start of planting and after another inch of rain this week, a lack of moisture is not an issue.
Jeff Sollars tells Brownfield extreme rainfall at the end of April is still having an impact on corn and soybean fields. “When it rains here it seems like it’s in inches and not tenths. There were some fields in some areas where the emergence was so poor that farmers just had to tear up whole fields and start over again—beans and corn.”
He says weather delays set planting back by about three weeks and while replanting has been wide spread, his Fayette County farm caught a lucky break and only needed about five percent touched up in fields.
Continue reading When it rains, it pours in Ohio at Brownfield Ag News.
Copyright © 2024 Indiana Farm Bureau®, Inc. is a member of the American Farm Bureau Federation®, a national organization of farmers and ranchers including Farm Bureau® organizations in 49 other states and Puerto Rico, and is responsible for Farm Bureau membership and programs within the State of Indiana.