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  1. Harvesting

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4425

    Harvest date should be determined by crop maturity, not by the calendar date. Plan to harvest fields with potential lodging or harvest loss problems (such as stalk rot or deer damage) first. All field shelled corn with more than 15% moisture must be dried ...

  2. Specialty Corns

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4426

    The type of corn most widely planted in Ohio and across the U.S. is yellow dent. High grain and silage yield potential, high feed value, and availability of adapted superior hybrids account for the widespread use of yellow dents. Yellow dents have the hig ...

  3. Fertility Recommendations

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4423

    A good nutrient management program is one of the keys to high-yield corn production. Instituting best management techniques to ensure adequate nutrient availability throughout the growing season can pay real dividends at the end of the year and minimize t ...

  4. Join us in 2025 on the First Friday Breakfast Series

    https://paulding.osu.edu/news/join-us-2025-first-friday-breakfast-series

    Join Paulding County Extension Office for the  Farm Management and Agronomy Monthly Agriculture Breakfast  in Paulding County, Ohio! The next breakfast will take place on  Friday, September 5, 2025 from 7:30 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. at the  Paulding Pancake Hous ...

  5. Crop Rotation

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4326

    Crop rotation is the most effective pest control practice available to crop producers. The sequence of crops grown in a field affects the productivity of each crop. Research from most Midwest states indicate that a soybean crop following a crop other than ...

  6. Tillage

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4327

    Tillage disrupts soil aggregates, and repeated disruption destroys soil structure. It also causes a long-term decline in soil organic matter, which further destabilizes soil structure. Tillage disrupts the continuity of large soil pores and restricts the ...

  7. Producing Soybeans Without Tillage

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4333

    Growing soybeans in Ohio without tillage has become both practical and profitable, and often reduces or eliminates some tillage related problems. Time savings accrued by eliminating tillage can be invested in earlier and more careful planting or the plant ...

  8. Planting Date

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4335

    The date of planting has more effect on soybean grain yield than any other production practice. The results of a two-year planting date study conducted in Clark County, Ohio are shown in Figure 5-2. Yield loss resulting from delayed planting ranges from 1 ...

  9. Request Information

    https://ansci.osu.edu/about-us/request-information

    Request Information Michelle Milligan Department of Animal Sciences The Ohio State University 2029 Fyffe Road Columbus, Ohio 43210 Phone: 614-292-6401 Fax: 614-292-2929 ansci@osu.edu Undergraduate Student Program Graduate Student Program Equine Inquiries ...

  10. Disease Control

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/node/4325

    EARLY SEASON AND SEED-BORNE DISEASES Phytophthora root and stem rot is the most serious soybean disease in Ohio and is present everywhere soybeans are grown. Damage to the crop by Phytophthora sojae is most prevalent in fields with poor drainage, high num ...

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