"When you have your soil test and an idea on what crop and yield potential you're planting for, communicate those needs. The local retailer is going to be pretty important to source those nutrients that you need and provide access...The ability to take possession, with on-farm storage, [there's] an increasing amount of on-farm storage for fertilizer these days. That may provide some flexibility if we have some winter filling."
He notes it's important for farmers to plan to apply nutrients as efficiently as possible.
"We go back to the basics and the principals, which are generally, in-the-soil banded fertility is the most efficient. In soil placed nitrogen and bands for phosphorus, it's with or close to the seed is the most efficient manner for that. We also have to remember to consider our fertility credits. Do we have previous legumes, like those pea crops that are out there? Sometimes we offer the nitrogen credit, other times not. [In] today's climate, I think we should be tapping on some of the nitrogen credit there, but we tend not to for soybeans because soybeans remove most of their nitrogen. For those blessed with manure, now's the time to make the most of those manure nutrients also."
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