Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

How is your corn harvesting progressing? Better than expected, worse, etc? Results and yields posted here.

How is your corn harvest progressing? How much do you still have to finish?

Please post your progress and yield information here to share with other farmers. Will will add the posts and pictures from Twitter that Ontario farmers are sending.

Thank you and good lulck with your harvest!

 

For soybean results click here.

 

For plot results visit the Farms.com Yield Data Centre at http://YieldData.Farms.com,

This site will be updated as soon as the results are sent in.

 

Views: 2312

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion



 

BradNimijohnOct 17, 11:07am via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Cutting brown mid-rib silage corn with the combine sucks. It is yielding good at 160bu at 26% moisture



 

thirlwallOct 17, 8:21am via Mobile Web

Corn being combined in Newbury, soys going north of Wallaceburg. It's good to see Mr. Sun!



 

AshDee_10Oct 17, 11:49am via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Maizex 312x and 3122CB coming off north of Bright at 23-26% , 180bpa dry 



 

NWCLHartungOct 17, 3:00pm via Twitter for iPhone

Corn coming off at 22.5% by gowanstown


 

NWCLHartungOct 17, 1:50pm via Twitter for iPhone

Corn field tour around Mt forest, seeing a lot of anthracnose stalk rot



 

AdrianVanDykOct 17, 3:26pm via Web

Beans inbound to Thamesville testing 15.5 down to 14.1%. Corn running 20-21% moisture. Some wheat going in later today.



 

MrFarmerDOct 17, 7:23pm via Twitter for iPhone

#Corn #Harvest2011 has began in Dundas county took off 29 acers of NK n29t 210 bu/a#syngenta #awesome #Ethanol #payday



 

cropwizOct 17, 8:57pm via Twitter for iPhone

Started corn today on some well drained ground. Still 29% but soil conditions were decent so we keep going.



 

maize_ingOct 18, 6:20am via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Too wet to harvest soybeans? Switch to corn if moisture under 28%. Only 42 days until December



 

courtfarms5:38am via Twitter for BlackBerry®

If corn looks good it is yielding well. Average going to be 10 to 15 bu higher than previously thought

Got some off last week, 150 bushel at 19-23%. About 20% above average for yield.

RosendaleFarms profile

RosendaleFarms Check your corn fields for standability, with the wind storm coming tonight. http://t.co/XV8fKMbG

 Marvin Talsma 
 
Great results for DKC46-07, DKC43-27 and DKC42-72 in side by sides yesterday, 200 plus bushel yields for all!!

Reply to Discussion

RSS

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

Ont. farmer Tony McQuail reflects on NDP leadership race

The 73-year-old farmer and political veteran ran on themes of representation, regeneration, redistribution, and redesign.

Corn Acres Slide, Soybeans Gain as USDA Releases 2026 Planting Intentions

New USDA reports show U.S. producers planning fewer corn acres and more soybeans in 2026, alongside higher grain stocks compared to last year.

Estimate the functional sustainability and true costs of packaging

For growers and packers, packaging decisions have become more complex now that Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) legislation is rolling out in key markets in Canada. Ontario legislation, for example, went into force as of January 1, 2026.

Canola Crush Falls for Second Straight Month in February

The Canadian canola crush slowed for the second straight month in February but remained above the year-earlier level. A Statistics Canada report Tuesday pegged the February canola crush at 951,353 tonnes, down 9.7% from January although still up 7.8% from 882,610 in February 2025. It also marked the first time in six months the crush has dipped below the 1-million tonne mark. The high for the 2025-26 marketing year occurred in December 2025, with the crush hitting 1.077 million tonnes. The cumulative year-to-date 2025-26 canola crush (August to February) now stands at 7.066 million tonnes, compared to 6.812 million for the same period last year. That is up 3.7% and represents about 58% of the full-year Agriculture Canada forecast of 12 million tonnes. According to the Canadian Oilseed Processors Association, total national canola crush capacity is expected to reach 15 million tonnes in 2026. Cargill’s new canola crush plant at Regina is estimated to process about 1 million ton

Preparing your farm for wildfire season

Considering that Canada borders three oceans, spans six time zones, and has diverse terrain, it’s no surprise that a range of natural hazards can affect farms across the country at any given time. While one part of the country may be in a severe drought, another may experience record floods. But regardless of the location, one hazard has become an all-too-common threat during the warmer months: wildfires. Just look at Canada’s 2023 wildfire season, which was the most destructive on record. By the end of 2023, more than 6,000 fires had burned 15 million hectares of land, which, to put it in perspective, is substantially more than the annual average of 2.5 million hectares. Which is why being prepared for wildfires, wherever you are, is essential. That’s exactly the message that FireSmart Canada, a national program that helps Canadians increase neighbourhood resilience to wildfire and minimize its negative impacts, wants to raise awareness about. Below are some of FireSmart Canada’s

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service