Play #RealYield on Break

Chuck ZimmermanBayer CropScience, Genetics, Herbicides, seed, Video

Monty HendersonWant to take a break from harvest? How about playing some Liberty Link Real Yield game? The prizes are awesome.

Here’s how you play:

Visit www.realyieldgame.com and click on the promotion link.
1. Complete all fields in the registration or log-in process.
2. Select five fields in the game area to spray Liberty® to reveal incremental bushels of soybeans.
3. Look at the total number of incremental bushels of soybeans for all five fields in the silo and determine the prize won.

Limit three game plays per person – one game play for complete registration, one game play for completion of LibertyLink® Ratings/Reviews/Attributes, one game play for social sharing through the promotion website.

In the real world, missed weeds compromise real yield. The LibertyLink® system is simply a better solution that ensures you don’t lose yield from missed weeds. Choose LibertyLink® and Liberty® to maximize real yields with high-performing genetics and better weed control.

Monty Henderson from Indiana has had good results using the Liberty Link system:


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New Holland’s Forage Cruiser at #WDE15

Jamie JohansenAgribusiness, Audio, Equipment, Forage, Harvesting, Hay, livestock, New Holland, World Dairy Expo

wde-15-27-editedProducing the best quality feed possible is the end goal for New Holland’s FR Forage Cruiser SP Forage Harvesters. Naturally, one of the best places to display this monster of a machine is during the 2015 World Dairy Expo. The New Holland team has been out in full-force to talk to producers from around the globe about their line up of forage equipment.

General manager for the self-propelled forage harvesters, Doug Otto, was on hand to share the specs and talk about the machines power, performance, comfort and efficiency.

“For model year 2016 we have launched a five new model lineup with the FR 780 being the new star. We haven’t had a machine positioned with this horsepower before. It’s sporting a brand new engine with 16 liters at 775 horsepower and a smaller version at 650 horsepower. The two smaller units have a 13 liter engine at 480 and 550 horsepower.”

Doug said all model support a 34.5 inch cutter head. This is the widest in the industry and provides a very thin crop mat as it goes through the chopper. This means the food in the bunk produces a higher quality nutrition, which leads to higher milk yields.

“This FR machine produces top quality feed and we see that time and time again with the kernel processing samples and in hay crops that come back to us.” Doug said producers are not only excited about feed quality, but also capacity.

Dealers are taking orders now for delivery in late fall and early spring. Listen to my complete interview with Doug to learn more: [wpaudio url=”http://traffic.libsyn.com/zimmcomm/wde-15-nh-otto.mp3″ text=”Doug Otto, New Holland”]

View and download photos from the event here: 2015 World Dairy Expo Photo Album

Coverage of World Dairy Expo is sponsored by
Coverage of World Dairy Expo is sponsored by New Holland

Help Solve “The Great Yield Mystery”

Jamie JohansenAgribusiness, agronomy, yields

Screen Shot 2015-10-02 at 9.38.22 AMThe Mosaic Company has launched of “The Great Yield Mystery,” an episodic podcast drama focused on examining the intricacies of high-yield agronomy.

The interactive effort features a state-of-the-art podcast series that evokes memories of the radio dramas that ruled the airwaves before the advent of television. Listeners can download the podcast at greatyieldmystery.com or through some of their favorite podcast players including iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher and Podcast Addict, and then embark on a journey with a cast of characters as they attempt to determine what caused a decrease in one farmer’s yield during the past growing season.

“The Great Yield Mystery” will have a significant presence on Mosaic’s CropNutrition Twitter and Facebook pages. Additional clues, hints and background information will be provided as well as regular giveaways.

“This is a unique approach to not only engage and inform, but also entertain our audience,” says Brian Olson, Director of Marketing for Mosaic. “I think the appeal of ‘The Great Yield Mystery’ is that we’re asking listeners to be a part of the solution.”

CropNutrition.com provides engaging content to help farmers and retailers think about crop nutrition in new ways. It is also where listeners might find clues to help solve the Great Yield Mystery.

Verdesian Focuses on Farmer Profitability

Joanna SchroederAgribusiness, Company Announcement, Plant Science

In an effort to proactively strengthen profit-driven technologies and products, Verdesian Life Sciences has expanded its team. Jake Underwood has been hired as the new executive vice president of nutritionals and John “Sam” Wilson, Ph.D. will now be serving in the role of vice president of technology development.

verdesian“Global agriculture provides a unique challenge because there are so many variables,” said J.J. Grow, chief executive officer at Verdesian Life Sciences. “Jake’s and Sam’s perspectives on products and technologies in the industry will add a lot of value to our team as we look to make the Verdesian portfolio to be all-inclusive for farmers seeking healthier, more robust crops and a greater return on investment.”

Underwood has more than 16 years of experience in delivering results in sales, marketing and management. In his new role, Underwood will provide strategic direction for the Verdesian nutritionals and micronutrients business. He will lead the nutritional management and sales team and report directly to chief operating officer Greg Thompson.

Wilson brings more than 30 years of experience to lead the development of new technologies in all product categories. Prior to this position, he served as the global field development manager for FMC, where he managed new product development and led research for more than 250 trials around the world.

Covering Bases with Cover Crops

Kelly MarshallCover Crops, Education, Research

unnamedWhen we think of crops we think of food, but there dis another very important type of crop in the agricultural world– cover crops.

“Cover crops are usually planted between the regular crop production periods,” says Hanna Poffenbarger, a graduate student in the department of agronomy at Iowa State University. Poffenbarger did graduate work on cover crops at the University of Maryland.  “They protect the soil from erosion and take up excess nutrients when the ground would otherwise be bare.”

The method and results of the study can be read here, but Poffenbarger believes the results will be able to help farmers understand which benefits cover crops can best provide.

“Farmers can use our results to optimize cover crop management for their specific mulch and nitrogen goals,” she says.

New N-BOUND Stabilizer for Urea

Cindy ZimmermanEco Agro, Fertilizer, Nitrogen, Nutrient Management

Eco AgroEco Agro has introduced N-BOUND™ nitrogen stabilizer as a breakthrough for protecting nitrogen against loss in the soil, due to denitrification and leaching.

According to Norm Davy, Chief Marketing Officer for Eco Agro, the product incorporates unique PENXCEL technology to deliver a proven nitrogen stabilizer, Dicyandiamide (DCD), for applications not possible with previous formulations.

“Using PENXCEL technology, we have engineered a formulation that can be applied to three different nitrogen sources to protect against loss,” said Davy. “First, on urea we can add our fast-drying stabilizer and keep the granules flowing freely. Second, in UAN, N-BOUND eliminates the floating clumps of powder and settling hassles. And third, for anhydrous ammonia, growers can use non-corrosive N-BOUND stabilizer in their fall and spring applications, either blended into the tank or metered in line.”

ecoagro-n-boundEco Agro reports that in all tests conducted with various anhydrous equipment manufacturers, N-BOUND stabilizer has been proven non-corrosive and was accurately metered through standard systems, and Davy says it is a breakthrough for a stabilizer with limited use because of its handling characteristics. “With the original powder DCD you have a real hard time mixing it into fertilizer,” he says. “While DCD delivered results at a research level, without a viable formulation, the market never developed. It was just too difficult.”

Davy thinks growers and retailers will now give this stabilizer another try. “N-BOUND opens up possibilities for growers and retailers never available before. We make it easy to use with a liquid formulation that blends fast and eliminates the hoisting of heavy bags of powder into a tank”.

Read full release here.

Researcher Discovers Link in Understanding Pest

Kelly MarshallEducation, Research

Nematodes are a billion dollar threat to agriculture each year.  Plant scientists at the University of Missouri and the University of Bonn in Germany have discovered that nematodes use a specific hormone to help them feed on the plant.  This discovering could allow scientist to develop plants with resistance to the pests.

Mitchum-Melissa-180x120“Cell cycle regulation is a key aspect of plant development and one of the first events altered during the formation of the feeding sites nematodes use to acquire nutrients from host plants,” said Melissa Goellner Mitchum, a researcher in the Bond Life Sciences Center and an associate professor in the Division of Plant Sciences at MU. “These discoveries led scientists to suspect that cytokinin, a hormone that promotes cell division in plants, might play a key role in feeding site formation for nematode parasites.”

“As part of our research, we examined the activation of different components of the cytokinin pathway in response to nematode infection,” says Carola De La Torre, a postdoctoral fellow at MU who worked with Mitchum. “Also, we evaluated numerous plants that lacked the presence of these components and found that most of these plants were less susceptible to nematode infection. These results suggested to us that these little worms are not only utilizing parts of a plant hormonal pathway that is important for plant growth and development, but they also are doing it in a way that allows them to cause disease.”

Mitchum’s team partnered with Florian Grundler’s group at Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-University of Bonn, Germany, who further analyzed the connection between cytokinin and nematodes. Using advanced genetic tools, they discovered that nematodes create their own form of plant cytokinin and that, by secreting the hormone into the plant, they actively control the cell cycle leading to the production of ideal feeding sites to support their development. These findings show the ability of an animal to synthesize and secrete a functional plant hormone to establish long-term parasitism.

“Understanding how plant-parasitic nematodes modulate host plants to their own benefit is an essential first step in finding new technologies needed to develop crop plants with enhanced resistance to these devastating agricultural pests,” Mitchum said.

Researchers from Palacký University and the Institute of Experimental Botany Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic; the Institute of Biology and Applied Genetics and the Dahlem Centre of Plant Sciences, Freie Universität in Berlin, Germany; the Department of Botany, Warsaw University of Life Sciences in Warsaw, Poland; and the Department of Biology and the Graduate School of Science at Osaka University in Osaka, Japan all contributed to this study.

DuPont Pioneer Hosts #YieldHero Sweepstakes

Kelly MarshallDupont Pioneer, Harvesting, Twitter

cornHarvest is underway and DuPont Pioneer has launched a social media sweepstakes campaign.  Growers are invited to tweet a harvest photo of their Pioneer brand products using the hashtag #YieldHero.

Weekly winners of the sweepstakes will receive a Yeti cooler.  One grand prize winner will receive a trip for two anywhere in the United States.  The contest began September 11 and will continue till November 5, 2015.

“Every grower deserves a getaway, especially after harvest,” said Cathy Lee Fredrickson, DuPont Pioneer social media consultant. “We want our customers to share their success stories with fellow growers and also to win that chance to get away, on us!”

To enter, U.S. growers 18 years or older can take a harvest photo or “selfie” featuring Pioneer® brand products and post it to Twitter with the hashtag #YieldHero and mention @DuPontPioneer. Growers can then follow @DuPontPioneer for winner announcements.

There were more than 400 Yield Heroes recognized in 2014.

Corn Harvest is Underway

Kelly MarshallCorn, Harvesting, USDA

corn-harvest18 reporting states report that corn harvest in now underway.  The USDA reports that 18 percent of the corn crop has been harvested as of Sunday.  The crop condition reports remain the same– 68 percent of corn is rated at good or excellent while 22 percent is considered to be in fair condition.

Predictably the southern states, including Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee and Texas, report more than half their crop harvested.  Michigan, Minnesota and North Dakota report the fewest number of harvested acres, but overall percentages are up from last year; reports from this date last year were 11 percent.  The five year average is 23 percent.

Other key harvests now underway include soybeans (21 percent harvested in 18 states), cotton (11 percent in 15 states), sorghum (36 percent in 11 states), peanuts (18 percent in eight states), sugarbeets (17 percent in four states) and rice (69 percent in six states).

You can view the USDA report for yourself to see specific crops and states.

Luke Bryan Tours on Behalf of #Thankful4Ag

Kelly MarshallBayer CropScience, Security, social media, Twitter

#Thankful4AgLuke Bryan, Country Music Association and Academy of Country Music Entertainer of the Year, is touring with Bayer Corporation to bring attention to the 48 million Americans living in food insecure homes.  This is the second year that Bayer CropScience is working with Feeding America and Bryan’s Farm Tour to help feed families in need and you can be part of their social media initiative by tweeting the hashtag #Thankful4Ag.

Each tweet equals a donation of 11 meals.  The goal is 330,000 meals for those facing hunger.

“As the son of a farmer, I believe it’s important for everyone to understand and appreciate how hard today’s farmers have to work to provide us with the meals that grace our tables each day,” Bryan said. “I’m excited that as a sponsor of the Farm Tour this year Bayer will have the opportunity to promote the #Thankful4Ag campaign to my fans, giving these farmers the celebration they deserve.”