Tuesday 17th March 2026

A southeastern South Dakota farmer finished harvesting a month ago and came out of the field with better corn yields than expected but below average soybeans.

Scott Stahl, president of the South Dakota Corn Growers Association, tells Brownfield Ag News they caught some of those timely rains in July.

“Soil moisture is depleted as we head into 2022 so definitely still on the drier side of things. But, thankful for a few timely rains during the reproductive cycle of the corn crop, especially.”

Stahl says their soybean yields were disappointing because they didn’t get much needed rain in August and they had trouble with spider mites, which are at their worst in dry weather.

   

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