December 25, 2024

Channel Field Check Up Series: Early season weed management

The onset of the 2023 planting season means now is the ideal time to get ahead of weed pressure and make the right strategic decisions to help mitigate weed emergence.

If farmers work proactively before planting, it can be easier to manage weeds throughout the season.

Here are three crucial steps to setting up your fields for success and proactively defending them from weeds this planting season.

First, it’s important to know that it is often less expensive to manage weeds early in the season than it is to try to manage them later as heavy weed competition early in the growing season can cause significant yield loss.

Being proactive and implementing early season weed management will pay off in the long run because you’ll have greater control of weeds before they potentially affect your yield.

Next, timing your herbicide application appropriately is key to a stronger weed management regimen.

Spraying early and finding the correct herbicides to fit your situation — depending on location, weed type, label restrictions and crop tolerance — can provide better weed management all season long.

Your local Channel Seedsman will be the best source to help you determine the most effective herbicide for your fields.

Last, after your early season herbicide application has been made, it’s time to work with your Seedsman and local technical agronomist to scout your fields.

As a part of the Channel Field Check Up Series, Channel Seedsmen visit farms throughout the year and provide advice and insights to improve operations.

After planting and during the vegetative stage, your Seedsman will partner with you to evaluate nutrient needs, as well as insect, weed and disease pressure; document progress in the Climate FieldView platform; look ahead by prioritizing fields and areas of concern; and deliver a Custom Crop Report.

Working together throughout the year, your team at Channel will help you make a plan for continued postemergence weed control.

As planting season gets underway in Illinois, farmers can consider these tips to enhance yield potential.

Ensure that fields are fit for planting. Planting into wet soils can lead to soil compaction and less than ideal seed-to-soil contact, setting the crop back from the start.

Additionally, have weed control plans in place before getting the seed in the ground, but be flexible and ready to adjust those plans if the need arises based on weather conditions.

There are online tools available at Channel.com to help farmers evaluate the benefits of inputs, including a profitability calculator and a Population Optimizer tool.

Using the recommendations from these tools and working with your Channel Seedsman can help maximize the potential of your Channel corn products.

Channel and the Arrow Design is a registered trademark of Channel Bio, LLC. ©2023 Bayer Group. All rights reserved. Services and products offered by Climate LLC are subject to the customer agreeing to our Terms of Service. Our services provide estimates or recommendations based on models. These do not guarantee results. Consult with your agronomist, commodity broker, or other industry professional before making financial, farming, or risk management decisions. More information at https://www.climate.com/legal/disclaimer/. FieldView is a trademark of Climate LLC. ©2023 Bayer Group. All rights reserved.