Agronomist says early-planted Wisconsin crops should survive cold weather

Agronomist says early-planted Wisconsin crops should survive cold weather

An agronomist says he’s not worried about the corn and soybeans that were planted in southern Wisconsin ahead of recent cold weather.  Scott Rountree with Pioneer tells Brownfield corn and soybeans generally take about 120 growing degree units from planting to emergence. “A lot of that crop that got planted seven to ten, maybe even up to fourteen days ago, it’s going to need three plus weeks to get up out of the ground. We just haven’t had a lot of heat over the past couple of weeks and it just takes time.”

Rountree says many farmers in the state are getting anxious to plant, but the best thing they can do is wait for the right field conditions.

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