This year has been another interesting one. With recent, much needed rains, soybean planting continues to be delayed. According to the USDA NASS crop report on May 28, soybean planting was 63% complete compared to the average of 79%. As we approach June, we have received questions regarding how agronomic practices should change — if at all — for late planting. The following are considerations when planting in June or July.
Row Spacing
Several have asked if narrowing rows at this time of the year would be a good idea. Because the longest day of the year occurs on June 21, and all days get shorter after that, soybeans need as much sunlight as possible to make pods, seed, and yield. We like to see that canopy “green to the eye by the fourth of July” which may or may not be possible at this point. To close the canopy sooner, you may want to consider planting narrower than 30 inches. UNL research has shown that up to 5/8 bu/ac can be lost for every day after May 1 that planting is delayed. Thus, there is now a need to mitigate, to the degree still possible, the loss in the crop’s ability to capture all incoming sunlight from now on.

Figure 1. Average yield results from seven soybean row spacing studies published in the last 10 years.
In Figure 1 DuPont Pioneer Agronomy Research summaries several University studies conducted between 1997 and 2009. Five studies compared drilled versus 30-inch rows and found an average 4.1 bu/ac yield increase in drilled rows. Six studies showed essentially no yield difference when comparing drilled rows to 15-inch planted rows. Six studies showed a 3.6 bu/ac yield advantage with 15-inch rows compared to 30-inch rows.