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Ohio


Mild winter helps Ohio farmers fight the summer drought
Early planting is helping wheat, corm and soybeans
by WKSU's SIMON HUSTED

Reporter
Simon Husted
 
Ohio's corn and soy crops have so far fared well with this year's drought.
In The Region:

Crops everywhere in Ohio need rain, but Ohio’s two largest -- soy beans and corn -- are faring better than others. That’s because of the mild winter.

Harold Watters studies corn and soybeans for the Ohio State University Extension Office. He notes that they’re naturally more resilient than other crops because of their deep roots. And this year, farmers planted them – as well as wheat -- in late winter, long before the drought took hold.

WATTERS on crop status

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“We’re having some short-term impacts now that will affect final yield, but we can overcome those, given a chance. I am always optimistic about our crop production so I am confident that we will have an average crop coming into the season.”

Still, he says, 3 to 4 percent of corn and soy bean crops are lost for every day of hot, dry temperatures like the ones coming up this week.

 


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