Minnesota Fishing Wisconsin Hunting
HotSpotOutdoors.com

Fishing Minnesota
Fishing Wisconsin

"We Have More Fun"
Before Posting ANY - web address, commercial contact info, e-mail addresses or commercial pictures please Click Here for more information.
To get authorization to post for items or services wanted, or for sale items please Click Here
.
We insist that posts follow Forum Policy. Be sure to read it before posting. Thanks much.
Please keep your posts fun, friendly, and sharing with good family values.
You've Found the Best Outdoor Members on the Net Right here. Enjoy!


Register HereForum Policy - Please, you must read before using this forum. Thanks!Fishing Minnesota
Who's Online
67 registered (!wall-i-king, 46° - 94° Angler, Adam Wolf, b1gf1sh1, Bassman55, bgreen82, 6 invisible), 238 Guests and 29 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Outdoor Pro Store


On The Forums ...
On the ice over the weekend!
by bmc
0 seconds ago
Matt Cassell.......a free agent!!!
by KTapper
13 minutes 43 seconds ago
pickled northern
by JollyT
34 minutes 12 seconds ago
New Laptop and Software questions
by MuleShack
46 minutes 6 seconds ago
?
by bmc2b
51 minutes 49 seconds ago
TO's b-day
by KTapper
Today at 12:51 AM
Solar panel on fishhouse What size and where is the best palce to ?
by Christopher Quast
Today at 12:45 AM
How much does it roughly cost to fill a 100 lber + a couple other ???
by Christopher Quast
Today at 12:39 AM
Which Tip Up
by Hoffer
Today at 12:38 AM
just a little rant...
by Rost
Today at 12:30 AM
Newest Members
Adirondacker, Eyez9, bingobob, SDhunter, xcelr8n
40479 Registered Users
Top Posters today
Sandmannd 37
harvey lee 28
dtro 27
mrklean 22
shackbash 20
LEP7MM 18
stfcatfish 17
CrappieFshr651 17
drewski 15
Dbl 15
Forum Stats
40479 Members
185 Forums
183469 Topics
1568672 Posts

Max Online: 3699 @ 05/13/08 12:57 PM
Page 1 of 2 1 2 >
Topic Options
#1558694 - 10/15/08 11:33 AM Corn
mngoosehunter Offline
FishingMN Family

Registered: 11/17/05
Posts: 116
Loc: Albertville, MN
When do you think the corn will start to come down? I know up north some of it is still green so im thinking 3 weeks or so. Havent been down south and I was just wondering what you all think about the corn down there? I heard down in south eastern Mn some were going to start cutting today.. probably just a little for cows? Thanks

Top
#1558700 - 10/15/08 11:39 AM Re: Corn [Re: mngoosehunter]
Bass N Spear Offline
HotSpotOutdoors Specialist

Registered: 08/24/06
Posts: 9340
Loc: Chanhassen, MN
from what i have heard from other farmers, its about a month behind right now.
_________________________
Take a Kid Spearing!!
Come on Big Mama, Bite That Thang

Fishing Minnesota Sponsors!
HSO Arctic Armor - Check it out here!
HotSpotOutdoors Specialist & Spearing ProStaff

Top
#1558701 - 10/15/08 11:40 AM Re: Corn [Re: mngoosehunter]
SORNO Offline
HotSpotOutdoors Family

Registered: 10/15/08
Posts: 44
Loc: Southern, MN
My renter plans to take the corn in the middle of next week if it stops raining. He runs a lot of land thou so he needs to take it if it isn't quite ready yet.

Top
#1558717 - 10/15/08 11:54 AM Re: Corn [Re: SORNO]
mrklean Offline
Sr IceLeaders Family

Registered: 01/02/07
Posts: 1507
Loc: Buffalo MN
In southern MN my dad said if there is no rain its next week, its pretty dry about 20%

Top
#1558744 - 10/15/08 12:13 PM Re: Corn [Re: mrklean]
LEP7MM Offline
HotSpotsOutdoors Specialist

Registered: 01/01/05
Posts: 1794
Loc: Le Sueur, MN
My cousins run approx 3500 acres and started taking corn out almost 2 weeks ago.

Top
#1558801 - 10/15/08 12:58 PM Re: Corn [Re: LEP7MM]
Shoot2Kill Offline
IceLeaders Family

Registered: 11/12/05
Posts: 218
Loc: MN
Here's another question for you guys related to the fields. I live south of St Cloud and it seems that nearly every farmer chisel plows every single one of their fields within a day or two of harvesting it - whether it's corn or beans. The corn came off the field behind my house yesterday and this morning they were out chisel plowing it already. I know they're not into farming to feed the wildlife, but chisel plowing everything in sight leaves very little if any food left for deer, phesants, etc and there is nothing better than hunting next to picked corn fields in the fall - IMO.

So my question - why are all of these fields chisel plowed in the fall when they do it again in the spring? I'm originally from Iowa where I hardly ever saw a field turned over in the fall.
_________________________
Hunting is more than life and death, it's MUCH more important than that!

Top
#1558803 - 10/15/08 01:04 PM Re: Corn [Re: mngoosehunter]
BLACKJACK Offline
Sr HotSpotOutdoors Family

Registered: 01/02/01
Posts: 3333
Loc: Willmar, MN
Here in Kandiyohi county, the people that have livestock have already chopped lots of corn. Still lots of soybeans in the field, they'll work on that first. I did see some corn being picked yesterday. The good thing is that nowadays with the big equipment it doens't take them long, the big farmers will pull in with 2 combines and semi's and an 80 will be gone in a day. The flip side is that with the high cost of fuel for drying, they may leave it longer in the field, hope for a freeze and some drying weather.

The good news is that there will be lots of birds for later in the season!! I actually think its a good thing to have a delayed harvest, its not such a slaughter early.
_________________________

Top
#1558810 - 10/15/08 01:11 PM Re: Corn [Re: BLACKJACK]
Shoot2Kill Offline
IceLeaders Family

Registered: 11/12/05
Posts: 218
Loc: MN
Originally Posted By: BLACKJACK

The good news is that there will be lots of birds for later in the season!! I actually think its a good thing to have a delayed harvest, its not such a slaughter early.


Exactly. Late season should be excellent.
_________________________
Hunting is more than life and death, it's MUCH more important than that!

Top
#1558942 - 10/15/08 03:30 PM Re: Corn [Re: Shoot2Kill]
fishermatt Offline
Sr FishingMN Family

Registered: 09/21/01
Posts: 490
Loc: Otter Tail County, MN, USA
Here in north central MN there is some corn being chopped for silage, but there probably won't be any combining done til after rifle season unless we get a hard freeze and then some good sunny weather.
_________________________
WORK is the grand cure of all the maladies and miseries that ever beset mankind. -–Theodore Roosevelt

Do it now, then it’s done --fishermatt

Top
#1558950 - 10/15/08 03:39 PM Re: Corn [Re: Shoot2Kill]
SORNO Offline
HotSpotOutdoors Family

Registered: 10/15/08
Posts: 44
Loc: Southern, MN
Originally Posted By: Shoot2Kill
Here's another question for you guys related to the fields. I live south of St Cloud and it seems that nearly every farmer chisel plows every single one of their fields within a day or two of harvesting it - whether it's corn or beans. The corn came off the field behind my house yesterday and this morning they were out chisel plowing it already. I know they're not into farming to feed the wildlife, but chisel plowing everything in sight leaves very little if any food left for deer, phesants, etc and there is nothing better than hunting next to picked corn fields in the fall - IMO.

So my question - why are all of these fields chisel plowed in the fall when they do it again in the spring? I'm originally from Iowa where I hardly ever saw a field turned over in the fall.
I am in the south central part of the state and there are a lot of framers, including my renter, that does No Till soybeans. I would say 50% or more of the corn flieds around me within 15 miles are standing corn stalks all winter long. I never understood why they couldn't wait until string or even wait until all the crops were out before they plowed.

Top
#1558963 - 10/15/08 03:49 PM Re: Corn [Re: SORNO]
mrklean Offline
Sr IceLeaders Family

Registered: 01/02/07
Posts: 1507
Loc: Buffalo MN
You dont plow in the spring you dig, thats pretty much turn the top soil over so you can get ready to plant. In the fall you plow to turn everything over, get the roots turned over. They plow right away because its a time thing, get everything done ASAP because you never know when the snow will come and you will be stuck with untilled fields. Many farmers have teams so one team does harvest the other does the tilling, so they harvest a field then the other guys come right behind and till them up.

Top
#1559011 - 10/15/08 04:25 PM Re: Corn [Re: mrklean]
Dotch Offline
Sr FishingMN Family

Registered: 06/02/02
Posts: 1089
Loc: Bugtussle
Someone alluded to the "team" concept and that's sort of how fall tillage works only around here on the mid-size and smaller operations, it usually involves having people hanging around with free time on their hands who love driving tractor. The fall tillage is known as "primary tillage". It is usually accomplished with a moldboard plow, a disk-chisel or ripper combination, a v-ripper, in some cases an in-line ripper. The purpose for this is to eliminate some of the residue on the surface to allow the soil to dry out and warm up faster in the spring. Getting it done closely behind the combine as someone mentioned is a plus because it's done before conditions deteriorate as they frequently do later in the fall. P & K fertilizer can incorporated at this time and the field is put to bed for the season and ready for secondary tillage in the spring when the ground is fit. Early planting is crucial to high yielding corn, high yielding corn pays more bills. That said, it the field is going into soybeans the following season, standing stalks or reducing tillage is an option as the planting date is not as critical. No till soybeans however have received mixed reviews especially in parts of SC MN and this fall has been no exception. Questions about yield, harvest date as well as soybean aphid behavior remain. Moldboard plowing cornstalks to plant soybeans the following year, especially now with the cost of fuel probably doesn't create a very good return on your tillage $. Secondary tillage is performed in the spring with a digger or soil finisher. This prepares the seedbed for the crop, whether it be corn or conventional soybeans.

Oh yeah, almost forgot, corn moistures in SC MN are all over the board. Later maturing and later planted hybrids are still carrying a lot of moisture, in the mid to upper 20's yet. In areas where stalk rot set in early and caused premature plant death, some of that is being harvested and put right in the bin. The area from about Waldorf to Amboy contains many fields where this occurred. This is more the exception and not the rule across SC MN however. With the days getting shorter and temperatures becoming cooler, the chances of getting much help from Mother Nature to dry this crop down further in the field are becoming slim. Yields in the non-stalk rot areas are trending above expectations so far. Translation: With wet corn and above expected yields, it likely will be a more drawn out affair waiting for the corn to come off than it has been in many years.


Edited by Dotch (10/15/08 04:40 PM)
_________________________
Said, black sheep, black, do you got some wool?
Yes, I do, man, my bag is full.

Top
#1559258 - 10/15/08 08:54 PM Re: Corn [Re: Dotch]
mrklean Offline
Sr IceLeaders Family

Registered: 01/02/07
Posts: 1507
Loc: Buffalo MN
Are you a farmer Dotch?

Top
#1559466 - 10/15/08 11:01 PM Re: Corn [Re: mrklean]
Dotch Offline
Sr FishingMN Family

Registered: 06/02/02
Posts: 1089
Loc: Bugtussle
On the side. I work with ~ 150 farmers as a part of my profession.
_________________________
Said, black sheep, black, do you got some wool?
Yes, I do, man, my bag is full.

Top
#1559475 - 10/15/08 11:13 PM Re: Corn [Re: Dotch]
mrklean Offline
Sr IceLeaders Family

Registered: 01/02/07
Posts: 1507
Loc: Buffalo MN
icic

Top
Page 1 of 2 1 2 >


Moderator:  BDR, Borch, muc33, setterguy 
Hot Spot Outdoors


Ice Leaders Sponsors


Support our Sponsors