Skip to main content

Farmers brace for potential record-setting corn and soybean crop

Share
Huron County, Ont. -

It’s been a summer to remember for farmers across Ontario.

Dry planting, timely rains and months of warm, humid weather, have some farmers realistically expecting record-setting yields come harvest time.

“A lot can happen between now and harvest. I hope we see maturity of the corn here in the next two weeks, then we’ll need another three to four weeks for it to dry down,” says Blyth-area farmer, Peter Heinrich. “But, I think, there will be some fields that will be breaking records, yes.”

Aside from recent hail storms ruining some farmer’s crops, the weather has been almost perfect for growing anything, but especially corn and soybeans. The two main crops grown by Ontario farmers.

“It’s always been warm. We’ve never really had a cold spell, so it never really slowed down which we like to see. Especially this fall, energy costs are going to be high and this carbon tax business adds on top of that. So, drying is a huge expense, so the drier we can get the corn at harvest, the more money in our pockets,” says Heinrich.

The annual Great Ontario Yield Tour by Farms.Com experts Moe Agostino and Abhinesh Gopal, predicts Ontario corn yields to reach 191 bushels per acre, beating the 2018 record of 183 bushels per acre. Soybeans are expected to just miss records, hitting 51.7 bushels per acre, just below last year’s 53 bushels per acre.

But, the ever precautious agriculture community isn’t counting the kernels before their combined.

“The crop isn’t in the bin yet,” But, I’m excited. It looks good, but I won’t say it’s a record yet,” says Holmesville-area farmer, Mike Colclough.

Harvest will likely be one to two weeks ahead of schedule, due to the pristine summer conditions. Farmers can hardly wait to get their excellent crops off the fiel, and into the safety of their combines, bins, and elevators.

“Crops sure look good. Weather has been just right. Right amount of rain, and everything, but Mother Nature always has the last say, so we’ll see,” says Colclough.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Hertz CEO out following electric car 'horror show'

The company, which announced in January it was selling 20,000 of the electric vehicles in its fleet, or about a third of the EVs it owned, is now replacing the CEO who helped build up that fleet, giving it the company’s fifth boss in just four years.

Stay Connected