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Old 24-07-2003, 12:03 AM
Chris
 
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Default Corn patch made into crop circles

This year is my first with a patch of corn. I have a raised bed (4 x
16) devoted to corn and probably planted the corn too close together,
but, what the heck. The corn started to tassle and I had small
silkies coming from the stalk - life was good. Monday night, though,
we were hit by a massive severe thunderstorm which flattened about
seven-eighths of my crop. What left standing just depresses me. Now,
my neighbors with acre-big crops of corn don't seem to have suffered
much at all.

What gives? Is it something about the closeness of planting? (The
stalks bent at the soil, the plant did stay in the ground.)
Or the smallish patch didn't afford as much protection to the interior
as a huge planting?
What do I do now? So far, I've done nothing and the stalks are still
green and don't seem too dead.
And finally, how do I prevent this in the future?

Thanks,
Chris
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Old 24-07-2003, 12:03 AM
Lattés
 
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Default Corn patch made into crop circles

Or the smallish patch didn't afford as much protection to the interior
as a huge planting?


Um, I don't REALLY know but that would seem to be the obvious answer

peace
d


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Old 24-07-2003, 12:22 PM
Pat Kiewicz
 
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Default Corn patch made into crop circles

Chris said:

This year is my first with a patch of corn. I have a raised bed (4 x
16) devoted to corn and probably planted the corn too close together,
but, what the heck. The corn started to tassle and I had small
silkies coming from the stalk - life was good. Monday night, though,
we were hit by a massive severe thunderstorm which flattened about
seven-eighths of my crop. What left standing just depresses me. Now,
my neighbors with acre-big crops of corn don't seem to have suffered
much at all.


Their good luck, partly. Straight line winds from thunderstorms have been
known to lay over groups of TREES. Field corn can suffer blow-downs.

I also suspect the large fields are most vulnerable to lesser winds at the edges.
Compared to the large field, your small patch is all edge.

What do I do now? So far, I've done nothing and the stalks are still
green and don't seem too dead.


Stand it all back up. Bring in garden soil or (even better) some good compost
and plop it down at the bottom of the corn stalk. Locate the mound of compost
where it will do the most good to prop up the plant. This might not be enough
for tall corn. In which case, drive some stakes along the end of each row and
run some twine along the row, looping the twine around the stalks to prop them
up and tying it of to the stakes at each end. Or, with block plantings, run a
grid of twine through the plot to prop them up. And then do the compost at
the base of the stalk thing.

And finally, how do I prevent this in the future?


You are never going to prevent it completely, but to minimize the chances,
hill up the corn with soil brought in from another bed or with compost before
it gets more than thigh high. Make sure your soil is not short of potassium.
(I give my corn extra K to help ensure strong roots and stems.)

Keep on hand materials to prop it up.

I have had no blow-downs for a couple of years, then suffered one this year.
We have had some unusually strong, fast moving storms this summer.

--
Pat in Plymouth MI

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)

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Old 24-07-2003, 01:22 PM
Aaron Baugher
 
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Default Corn patch made into crop circles

(Chris) writes:

What gives? Is it something about the closeness of planting? (The
stalks bent at the soil, the plant did stay in the ground.)


Possibly. If your plants were crowded enough that they didn't develop
as much root system as they normally would, that wouldn't help. But
this is just a typical problem with corn, so you may not have done
anything wrong. Corn just doesn't develop a very strong root system
below the soil, and it presents a big target for wind.

Or the smallish patch didn't afford as much protection to the
interior as a huge planting?


Probably, although I've seen plenty of large fields where corn around
the edges was standing tall after a storm and large patches in the
middle of the field were flattened.

What do I do now? So far, I've done nothing and the stalks are
still green and don't seem too dead.


If the ground is very wet, you may be able to stand it back up, as
someone else suggested. It may stand back up somewhat on it's own,
too. If you can't stand it back up without breaking the stalks, it
will probably grow okay where it is, as long as the ears aren't
actually touching the ground, but it'd be better for pollination to
stand it up if possible.

And finally, how do I prevent this in the future?


There's not much you can do, short of building a windbreak of some
sort around your corn. Farmers buy crop insurance to cover it, and do
their best to harvest it anyway, even if it means using special
equipment to pull the downed stalks into the combine.


--
Aaron

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Old 24-07-2003, 07:42 PM
Phaedrine Stonebridge
 
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Default Corn patch made into crop circles

In article ,
Aaron Baugher wrote:

What do I do now? So far, I've done nothing and the stalks are
still green and don't seem too dead.


If the ground is very wet, you may be able to stand it back up, as
someone else suggested. It may stand back up somewhat on it's own,
too. If you can't stand it back up without breaking the stalks, it
will probably grow okay where it is, as long as the ears aren't
actually touching the ground, but it'd be better for pollination to
stand it up if possible.



We followed Pat K's idea of criscrossing two lengths of twine between
the stalks and anchoring it at both ends (in the middle too in our case)
with stakes, and standing the corn back up. That was nearly a week ago
and the corn, which had been flattened in a terrible storm, is going
great guns again. We also hilled it up a bit. But we have only two 4'
x 50' raised beds of corn. Still, it was not a pleasant task on a 98?
day. But it worked!


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Old 29-07-2003, 03:22 PM
Guy Bradley
 
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Default Corn patch made into crop circles


"Chris" wrote in message
om...
This year is my first with a patch of corn. I have a raised bed (4

x
16) devoted to corn and probably planted the corn too close

together,
but, what the heck. The corn started to tassle and I had small
silkies coming from the stalk - life was good. Monday night,

though,
we were hit by a massive severe thunderstorm which flattened about
seven-eighths of my crop. What left standing just depresses me.

Now,
my neighbors with acre-big crops of corn don't seem to have suffered
much at all.


One possibility might be that your neighbors with their large
plantings are growing field corn, while you are growing sweet corn. In
my experience, sweet corn plants aren't as robust as field corn. Once,
three or four years ago, my corn plants grew extraordinarily tall and
strong and bore extremely large ears. These were supposed to be
Florida Staysweet, which I had successfully grown before. However,
this corn was tasteless, so I presumed it was field corn. I don't
think a hurricane would have blown that corn over.

In the distant past I grew Illini, which was the first variety of
supersweet corn. These plants lacked vigor, were short and weak and
very prone to wind. Since then, I've grown Kandy Korn and Jubilee,
with no wind problems. Perhaps I was just lucky, but both of these
varieties are more robust than Illini.

In short, the variety of corn you grow may make a difference.

Guy Bradley
Chesterfield MO
zone 6


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