We preview the 2023 Pro Farmer Crop Tour and share how you can better interpret the data Crop Tour provides. To view this email as a web page,
click here | Crop Tour Sampling & Data Collection Methods Pro Farmer Crop Tour sampling and measurements are designed to get representative results for crop districts, states, and the entire Midwest – not individual fields or counties. Scouts measure three ears of corn or count pods on three soybean plants from just one location in each field surveyed. Each sample is identified by county so it can be tabulated by crop district, but is not associated with a specific field or farm location. Care is taken to move in and out of each field quickly, without damage. In Each Corn Field Scouts . . . | In Each Bean Field Scouts . . . |
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1. Record crop district and county. 2. Go 35 paces into the field to start sampling. 3. Measure row spacing and record. 4. Measure a 30' plot, then count all ears in two rows in the plot. Record total. 5. Pull the fifth, eighth and 11th ear off one row of the plot. 6. Take corn ears back to the car. 7. Measure the length of grain on each ear, average and record. 8. Count the kernel rows on each ear (will be an even number), average and record. | 1. Record crop district and county. 2. Walk as far into the field as possible without causing significant damage along your path. 3. Measure a 3' plot. 4. Count the total number of plants in the 3' row and record. 5. Randomly select three plants. 6. Measure row spacing and record. 7. Count all pods on selected plants and determine the average from those three plants. 8. Multiply the average pod count by the number of plants in the 3' section and record. (Note: There will most likely be small pods on each plant. WE WILL COUNT ANY POD THAT MEASURES ¼" OR MORE.) 9. Rate soil moisture and maturity against the two indices and record. |
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| Heading into this year’s tour, we know the corn crop was heavily stressed by dryness through June, though we don't know how much irrevocable damage was done early in the growing season or how the season will finish. One of the keys to this year’s Crop Tour will be how much damage we find from the drought conditions in the first half of the growing season. This year's Pro Farmer Crop Tour will give the most widespread "in-field" look at this year's crops with expert observations and 30 years of historical data to compare to. This free report shares: How to best analyze this year's Crop Tour data. The piece of data we use to tell if the soybean crop is shaping up to be a big crop. The most reliable set of data Crop Tour uncovers. A look at acreage changes and the supply and demand table. | |
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