Research revealed at Delaware Farm and Home Field Day Delaware scientist NEWARK, Del. - Forty to 45 bushels an acre is a good soybean yield today, but some farmers often get much less. They also oc casionally get as many as 60 bushels an acre in single fields or parts of a field. So far, however, no one has been able to do this on a consistent basis. -For example, Delaware’s state average is down around 25 bushels an acre. Delaware Extension agronomist Frank Webb would like to see growers on the Delmarva peninsula realize higher yields much more routineljr and he’s set up a demonstration project at the University of Delaware’s Georgetown Substation with this goal in mind. SILOSYN-Treated Silage Lowers Milk Production Costs If greatly improved silage is among your cost-cutting needs for this year, consider Young’s SILOSYN the proved preserv ative. It will allow you to cut cori) or grass at just the right moment for peak feeding value. You can store corn silage at up to 65% moisture, grass silage up to 70%. And, you can use your present storage What Webb has done is to take all the various tillage practices used to raise soybeans in this area and set them up in test plots at the substation farm where they can be compared. Laid out side by side are conventional plantings using a moldboard plow, along with chisel plow, subsoil and no-till treat ments. Although plant populations are the same throughout the plots, some beans are planted in 30 inch rows, some are spaced 15 inches apart and some are drilled in broadcast. Various cover crops have also been used, to see bow these affect performance. For his comparisons the agronomist has chosen the. full-season soybean variety, Essex, which as a good young’s. Roaring Spring, Pa. 16673 performance record on the peninsula. His cover crops this year are hairy vetch, crimson clover and rye, used with different tillage treatments. Next Fall he hopes to add Yuchi arrowleaf clover, a vigorous forage legume, to his list of covers. Specific objectives of the sutdy are (1) to compare tillage methods, (2) to compare row spacing within tillage methods and (3) to evaluate the performance of different cover crops with soybeans. The project should last 3 to 4 years and when it’s over, Webb hopes to be better able to tell farmers just how to reach those magical high yields everyone dreams about. wants “We know that soybeans are good scavengers that use left over fertility well as opposed to new fertility,” he explains. (For example, the state’s record 81 bushel an acre yield a few years ago came from a field that had been planted in asparagus for a number of years and was in soybeans for the first time.) Since the plant does not respond well to direct nitrogen applications, it seems essential to determine its response to the organic nitrogen supplied by various cover crops. Some of the plots in the present comparison have been prepared with an in row subsoiler which breaks up the soil’s hardpan, to see if such treatment of the ground has any effect on plant performance. Visitors to this year’s Farm and Home Field Day, Wednesday, August 10 at the Georgetown Substation, will have a chance to observe this and other research and demonstration plots aimed at boosting yields in the crops grown in Delaware. Field Day activities begin at 9:30 a.m. and include bus and wagon tours of the plots, as well as a special homemaker program, a diagnostic plant clinic, a farm safety program - “Project Well Aware”, plus numerous other exhibits and demonstrations. A traditional fried chicken lunch will be available at noon in the grove (tickets facilities. You’ll get less shrinkage, more palatability and digestibility, too. We can help you realize these benefits with this year’s crop. Try SILOSYN. Your cows will appreciate it and so will you. Your Young’s man can help you make it work this year. If you haven’t met him as yet, write us and we’ll ask him to visit. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 6,1977 more beans ' * 4< A >• |¥: Extension agronomist Frank Webb checks out soybean performance in demonstration plots at the University of Delaware's Georgetown Substation. Comparison of different production practices should show farmers how to boost yields. $2). Activities will conclude University of Delaware’s with a watermelon break at Agricultural Experiment 3:30. This popular annual event Cooperative Extension is sponsored by the Semce - me* Station and the Delaware 103