Yield Contest Winner Pushes Bushels With Focus On Fertility

Nebraska no-tiller Mike Scholting shares how zeroing in on fertilizer applications is increasing yields both on and off his contest ground.

Just south of Omaha, on 33 acres of flat river-bottom ground in Sarpy County, Mike Scholting is hitting nearly 300-bushel corn yields.

A frequent name on the winners’ list of the National Corn Growers Association’s yield contest, Scholting was the first-place national winner of the 2011 Class A No-Till/Strip-Till Non-Irrigated division with a yield of 293.59 bushels. Scholting says his personal best is 298 bushels per acre.

The majority of his fields don’t benefit from the sandy-loam soils and nice water table as his contest acres, but combining no-till with what he learns from his contest ground helps him improve yields and profits on his entire farm.

Fighting Dry Spells. The biggest yield-limiting factor Scholting faces is a lack of rainfall.

“If we get the rain, 200- or 220-bushel corn isn’t a problem,” Scholting says. “We just don’t get the rain that we need all the time. Twenty percent of the time we get what we want, about 30% of the time we get what we need, and 50% of the time we’re just on the short side.”

Of the 2,900 acres of corn and soybeans Scholting no-tills, 95% of them are on terraced, rolling ground in Louisville, Neb., primarily consisting of Kennebec clay-loam soils. He sometimes faces tight soils on his sidehills with the lack of moisture.

Fortunately, no-till helps preserve the moisture Scholting’s fields do receive. He gave up conventional tillage in the late 1980s and saw a yield bump in transitioning to no-till. It also helps keep…

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Laura allen

Laura Barrera

Laura Barrera is the former managing editor of No-Till Farmer and Conservation Tillage Guide magazines. Prior to joining No-Till Farmer, she served as an assistant editor for a greenhouse publication. Barrera holds a B.A. in magazine journalism from Ball State University.

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