In the Ulen, Minnesota area, West Central Ag Services Territory Sales Manager Clyde Kringlen says wheat harvest is wrapped up for the most part. Falling numbers and other quality issues were the main harvest story. “Now the challenge is sorting through which varieties did the best. Are those results comparable to previous yield data when planning for the 2020 season?” The corn and soybeans welcomed the stretch of warm weather last. Kringlen says western Minnesota gained about 60 to 70 head units over a three day span. “I looked at an 85 day corn variety planted mid-May late last week. In my opinion it needs two to four days more to make it,” says Kringlen. “The top cluster that is usually lost on soybeans is there and looks very good.”
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