Corn crop still slow, but catching up
Posted on: Monday, 1 June 2009, 15:52 CDT
A slow planting season has begun to even out for the U.S. corn crop, now 93 percent planted and 73 percent emerged, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said.
Planting at this week of the year is historically 97 percent completed. While the crop lagged far behind its five-year average for most of the spring, the historic average for emergence is 86 percent for this week of the year, meaning the crop is catching up after a slow start.
Slowed by floods, Illinois and Indiana remain far behind with 52 percent of the corn crop emerged against five-year averages of 92 percent and 85 percent, respectively, the weekly crop report said.
Soybeans are 66 percent planted against an historic average of 79 percent for this time of year. Spring wheat is 89 percent planted, compared to the historic average of 98 percent. The winter wheat crop is 77 percent headed out, close to the historic average of 81 percent for this time of year.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- Seed Bank Collects 10 Percent Of World’s Plant Species
- Getting Plants To Rid Themselves Of Pesticide Residues
- Corn planting still lags behind average
- Corn planting trails five-year average
- Black Hills Corp. Subsidiary Sells 23.5 Percent in Wygen I Power Plant to The Municipal Energy Agency of Nebraska
- Long Beach Continues Hitting Historical 10-Year Lows for Water Use
- U.S. Corn Planting Still Slow, but Gaining
- Corn Planting Lags Behind 5-Year Average
- I Sent Blair Drugs Plant
User Comments (0)


RSS Feeds