Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

How did your soybeans yield? Please post your location, yields, variety and other feedback here.

We can use this discussion area to have everyone post how their soybeans performed this year.

Ideally everyone will post their location, yields, number of acres, what varieties they grew and what agronomic feedback they had on the soys.

People can then check out the Company plot data as presented on the Farms.com Yield Data Centre,

http://www.yielddata.farms.com

 

 

 

Views: 1752

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Did our weigh off at home yesterday, PS 2393 NR2 best bean on farm again, 58 bus!! + 4bus advantage.


NicoleWeber87Sep 26, 5:50pm via Twitter for iPhone

Great day for harvesting #soybeans hearing yield averages in mid 50's so far #harvest13#ontag


tecfire2Sep 28, 7:02pm via Twitter for iPhone

@Agridome @tvfarmer @LangstaffAl soybeans really got hurt here too. Averaging 41. Far cry from #harvest12

Shrive_03 Sep 30, 1:11pm via web

First Harvest problem of 2013 from a customer "My beans are yielding too much! Over 75bu/a" HS22RYS03 @HylandSeeds1 @jeremysegeren #ontag

GarloughB 11:18am via Twitter for BlackBerry®

Looking at S07-D2 IP soybeans in Tavistock. Great looking bean with 60+ bushel yield potential, and premiums for 2014 are $3.50/bu!!

         AshDee_10 11:31am via Twitter for BlackBerry

First soybean plot weighed off last night. #maizex Cobalts top the plot at 63.4bu in Baden #fromthefield

Graham Learn@grahamlearn 13h

This is what 69 bu/ac bean plants look like

 

aaron_stevanus Oct 3, 9:01pm via Twitter for BlackBerry

@PRIDESEEDS PS 1162 R2s averaged 50 bpa at our farm in Bloomingdale. Excellent consistency across all soil types #proud2plantPRIDEseed

AshDee_10 Oct 3, 11:31am via Twitter for BlackBerry

First soybean plot weighed off last night. #maizex Cobalts top the plot at 63.4bu in Baden #fromthefield

KrahnAgri Oct 3, 11:51pm via Twitter for iPhone

And the weights are in on the 83's......50 bu/ac on the button!!

KrahnAgri Oct 3, 1:49pm via Twitter for iPhone

Text came in from grower, wants a weigh wagon for his Pride PS0083's. Big yield!! #harvest13

KrahnAgri Oct 1, 6:36pm via Twitter for iPhone

Pulling off my bro's Pride PS0083's in style! If one machine is good, 3 are better! #harvest13 pic.twitter.com/zSe860NF2d

KrahnAgri Sep 22, 11:56am via Mobile Web (M5)

Early reports from growers on TH32004 from Thunder Seeds are 40-45bu/ac! Great performance from an early season variety!!

giff17 3:42pm via Twitter for BlackBerry®

30-61 soys are a total racehorse soybean. Good ground=good yield. Bad ground=BAD yield

Reply to Discussion

RSS

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

Ontario farmland prices cool down after years of double-digit jumps

Though the recent year-over-year increases in farm prices are levelling off in southwestern Ontario, good land remains too pricey for many people with dreams of becoming an owner. "Anything like 100 acres, you're just not going to find it for under $5 million," said Crispin Colvin, a farmer and area director of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture for Lambton and Middlesex counties. "There isn't really any cheap location to get into farming."  A report released this week by Farm Credit Canada, a Crown corporation that provides financing to the agriculture industry, said the average price of a farm in the southwestern Ontario region rose by 3.2 per cent in 2024, reaching an average per-acre price of $33,700.  That rate of increase is down considerably from recent years, which have seen double-digit increases in average farm prices: 2021: 22.2 per cent.  2022: 19.4 per cent.  2023: 0.7 per cent.   Colvin said he's seen prices well above what's laid out in the Farm Credit Canada repo

Ontario building set to stop smoking days after fire

A large agricultural storage building was destroyed in a fire today in Ontario, Oregon, that threatened nearby businesses and fuel storage facilities. Ontario Fire and Rescue (OFR) responded to the structure fire at 152 SE 9th Avenue, finding the approximately 25,000-square-foot building engulfed with flames visible through the roof in multiple locations. According to OFR, the fire threatened Murakami Produce to the south and a Farmers Supply COOP bulk fuel storage facility to the east while also spreading through vegetation to the west. "Rescue 1 established a water supply and started a defensive attack on the south end of the building to protect exposures," OFR stated.  Firefighters used three nearby hydrants to flow master streams, successfully containing the blaze to the building of origin and protecting neighboring structures. No injuries to civilians or firefighters were reported. The response included five engines, two ladder trucks, one water tender, two brush trucks, thre

How one agricultural society is taking inspiration from the 1800s to keep its fair relevant

It would cost about $80,000 to bring in the calibre of carnival rides that would rival Rockton World’s Fair or the Norfolk County Fair. It’s money the Burford Agricultural Society just doesn’t have. It operates on a “shoestring budget” from fundraising, Brant County grants, and donations from the community, society president Chris Howell said. After its longtime midway provider retired from the business several years ago, the society has struggled to set itself apart from the nearby fairs that also run over Thanksgiving weekend. But the event is “so much more than just the midway,” Howell told The Spectator. It’s “a celebration of farming, agriculture and rural life in Ontario.” When the Burford Fair started in 1860, it was a way for the farming community to gather to celebrate the end of harvest and see “who could grow the biggest pumpkin, who (had) the best horse,” he said. It’s that spirit the society wants to bring back.

Ontario Agri-Food Discovery Centre holds AGM

As it continues its journey towards an eventual opening, the Ontario Agri-Food Discovery Centre welcomed guest speaker Kerry-Leigh Burchill, director general of the Ottawa-based Canada Agriculture and Food Museum, to its annual general meeting to shed some light on what the group in Listowel can do to be successful. As Burchill explained to attendees at the Thursday morning meeting, the agriculture industry is one that is very dynamic and ever-changing, meaning the Discovery Centre will have to continuously invest in lifelong education for its team. “That you’re putting together a Discovery Centre intuitively expects that it is dynamic, but we really need to make sure that we continually support our staff and our volunteers to make sure that they are aware of those stories and can answer questions from the public because I can guarantee that the questions from the public are becoming more complex as they have access to more and more information and, oftentimes, misinformation,” Burch

How a trade war could boost small-scale farming in southwestern Ontario

A southwestern Ontario farmer hopes the ongoing U.S.-Canada trade war encourages the country to look inward to keep itself fed, while making itself more resilient in the face of future crises. It's a hope shared by some farmers with smaller operations, as they search for upsides in a situation that could have dire consequences for the Canadian economy — and agribusiness on a larger scale. "I think it's really important that we know how to supply ourselves," said Chris DeVries, the owner of Common Ground Farm in St. Thomas, who believes "we could 100 per cent produce all the food we need." The former engineer grows a wide range of vegetables year-round in a combination of fields, greenhouses and hoop houses, taking his harvest to farmers' markets in London and Kitchener. Common Ground also runs a delivery service in London and St. Thomas. A number of industries across Canada have already started cutting back as tariff threats from U.S. President Donald Trump — and a resulting lack o

© 2025   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service