indiana Prairie Farmer Logo

8 take-home lessons from corn in 2024

Corn Commentary: These lessons gleaned from the recent growing season are worth remembering.

Tom J. Bechman, Midwest Crops Editor

November 26, 2024

9 Slides
 rows of healthy green corn

Already have an account?

Photos by Tom J. Bechman

What will you remember about growing corn in 2024? Will it be a lesson about selecting the right window to plant? Or maybe you learned the value of having up-to-date scouting information when you make final fungicide decisions.

“Tar spot certainly got the attention of many growers this year,” says Dan Quinn, Purdue Extension corn specialist. “But economics did too, especially as corn prices fell off from midsummer into harvest. Two things growers will have top of mind going into 2025 will be about limiting crop disease in 2025 and narrowing down inputs to the essentials.”

While these are key takeaways from the 2024 season, they are far from the only ones, Quinn notes. How corn reacted to variable weather patterns also provided food for thought for next season and beyond.

Check out these pictures from the Corn Commentary field to see what Quinn classifies as important lessons and reminders from 2024. Think about how you can work these findings into your 2025 management plans.

About the Author

Tom J. Bechman

Midwest Crops Editor, Farm Progress

Tom J. Bechman became the Midwest Crops editor at Farm Progress in 2024 after serving as editor of Indiana Prairie Farmer for 23 years. He joined Farm Progress in 1981 as a field editor, first writing stories to help farmers adjust to a difficult harvest after a tough weather year. His goal today is the same — writing stories that help farmers adjust to a changing environment in a profitable manner.

Bechman knows about Indiana agriculture because he grew up on a small dairy farm and worked with young farmers as a vocational agriculture teacher and FFA advisor before joining Farm Progress. He works closely with Purdue University specialists, Indiana Farm Bureau and commodity groups to cover cutting-edge issues affecting farmers. He specializes in writing crop stories with a focus on obtaining the highest and most economical yields possible.

Tom and his wife, Carla, have four children: Allison, Ashley, Daniel and Kayla, plus eight grandchildren. They raise produce for the food pantry and house 4-H animals for the grandkids on their small acreage near Franklin, Ind.

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like