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Shelling corn / ready for planting.

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Macon Rounds View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Macon Rounds Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Shelling corn / ready for planting.
    Posted: 14 Apr 2024 at 11:42am
Ready for planting.







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Macon Rounds View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Macon Rounds Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Apr 2024 at 11:46am
We ended up with 4 each 5 gal buckets.
2 yellow and 2 red.

The corn has been drying on the cob since last October.

Any idea how many acreas a 5 gal bucket will plant ?

I'll get the 5 gal weight later today.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote VaAllis1990 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Apr 2024 at 12:45pm
I’d take a guess to say a 5 gallon bucket would plant 2 acres or so. Depends on seed size and population you want to plant, but that would be a fair guess
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Lars(wi) Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Apr 2024 at 7:53pm
I didn’t think anybody did that anymore.
Grandpa said years and years ago, many farmers did that during the Great Depression.
I tried to follow the science, but it was not there. I then followed the money, and that’s where I found the science.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Macon Rounds Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 Apr 2024 at 7:08am
This verity of corn is a mix of several heirloom seeds that have been handed down and planted in this area for decades and possibly a century.....

Last year we plowed and planted..... This year we are using a neighbors no-till planter...
We will be planting over two types of ground.
Tilled ground that was heavily populated with turnips last fall. And
Sod ground that was burned down and planted in tillage radishes....
Both will need weed control....
Hopefully I can do a better job cultivating this year but currently looking for a suitable 3 point sprayer.


Edited by Macon Rounds - 15 Apr 2024 at 7:09am
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ray54 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 Apr 2024 at 1:45pm
Originally posted by Lars(wi) Lars(wi) wrote:

I didn’t think anybody did that anymore.
Grandpa said years and years ago, many farmers did that during the Great Depression.

As a farming practice saving seed was just how it was done until hybrid corn was invented.

Wink  Just to show how backwards I have been, until my seed cleaning guy retired 2 years ago Cry most all my barley and oats seed has been home raised. I would buy 1000 or 2000 pounds of certified seed, and then save all that part of the crop for seed. Being somewhat more careful to clean, combine and truck bins to not have other seed in them. Repeated until it seemed prudent to get some new certified seed. Way cheaper to grow and clean your own, in many cases. Tied many "new" wonder varieties of barley over the years. Many did real good one year and a complete bust the next. Or the grain brokers local would come up with new trait to charge dockage on. One of the best of those was the kernel was to thin. Bushel weight had always been the standard that quality was measured from in the feed barley market, locally. It was exhalant in the bushel weight measure, so the new standard was how thick the seed was.  Wink  THICKS OF THE TRADE of being a grain broker.LOLLOL

My world has changed and as far as I know very little Land Grant University seed development work going on out here.  So any new variety is on patent, so seed saving is going away FAST. But I am ready to hang the farming up and just run a few cows. 


I sure don't recommend it, but I had pallet of barley seed cleaned in 2011, that got lost in the warehouse. Planted it in 2022, was more dust than seed because of weevil damage. Dispite drought conditions a lot more of it grew than I could of hoped for. Was going to cut for hay, but because of drought just turned the cows on it.

So anyway I don't think seed saving in the 1930's was driven by the Depression. Many corn farmers had not seen the benefits of high yielding hybrid corn yet.


Thanks Macon for sharing a bit of your live. And keeping some old traditions alive, along with old time proven varieties of corn.
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