Good looking stand and nice looking bins.
The corn bore and root worm resistant corn variety sure produced better yields maintaining the stalks.No more moths flying around either.Biggest thing was planting more seeds per inch for better yields.Same with the round up ready soybeans.
Otherwise we used to band the corn row with a root worm deterant.No need for that later.Other than that no other insecticide was used.
Rotation of crops was always done too.Legume plantings like alfalfa and soybeans to oats or corn with hauling manure a regular thing from feed lot.
Good yielding ground.
Every once in awhile depending on the year double cropping was done.Usually rye planted in fall after harvest/chopped in june/and replanted to soybeans,or oats and straw harvested in july to alfalfa later in the same year.
Farther south where growing season was longer double cropping was the usual.
We used to chop a lot of corn silage also.We had a cement silo.Picked corn mostly.Brought beans to town.Baled the hay in small squares up in the hay mow.Put up lots of brome hay from the ditches also.
Always fed around 300 fat cattle to go to IBP in Sioux City.Back then we always bought our feeder calves from South Dakota.Later we backed off and raised calves from 150 cows or so.
Decided to live in a more wooded area in southern Iowa with some land attatched and live out my dream while keeping the ground in the other county.I help out farmers here in the fall for something more to do.Yields are'nt quite as high as the old farm but it's not my worry any more.....Ha Ha.
Kinda pleasant not getting all the BIG bills any more but less responsibility then too.
It's different raising trees rather than row crops.The southern and eastern counties have more wildlife overall.Especially deer/coyotes and bobcats.
Both farms dandy places to live with the one I live at now with a half mile driveway out in the sticks.
We like to watch wildlife every day out the screened porch and balcony.
The old farm where I lived 45 years of my life.