Excellent job on achieving such an amazingly high yield! Those high yields should definitely help over supply the market and keep prices down to good and cheap, where they should be. We people of the world need you farmer's to continue growing lots of cheap bowls of delicious yellow corn.
@LAWSON086 жыл бұрын
You won't be eating this corn in a bowl. It's field corn...for ethanol or animal feed
@justincase28306 жыл бұрын
I missed the number of acres that the yield was 542.27 bushels.
@justincase28306 жыл бұрын
thanks for this information.
@robertreznik93306 жыл бұрын
It has to be >1.25 acres skipping 3 passes if more than one pass is needed for 1.25. Then a recheck for the next >1.25 check with 2 NCGA approved witnesses. If this second check is lower, then it is the average. If the second is higher the second is the official. The harvest rules are on the contest site. ncga.com
@CentraStrike6 жыл бұрын
I would like to see the actual plants producing that yield..
@drewspobox6 жыл бұрын
Lol at being disappointed with “mid 300 bushel corn”
@crazyhass846 жыл бұрын
I missed him jumping up and down. U showed him complaining about 230 bushel corn. Then say congrats on 542 record. Where is the footage of him combining the corn?!
@SwoodmediaVA6 жыл бұрын
I think they were probably lucky to film any of his corn or even spend time with him. That guy David Hula is a legend and super famous now. He breaks all the world records. I heard someone call him the King of Corn once.
@CentraStrike6 жыл бұрын
Swood Media You make it sound like he has paparazzi following him around.......OMG! It's David Hula! *faints
@hankelrod7315 Жыл бұрын
I want to see plants with the naked ears to see what 542 bu looks like, I’ve grown 300 before but I can’t visualize 542
@johanrosslee41336 жыл бұрын
Ok just did the conversion to hectare and ton this is a 34 ton per hectare harvest.
@stjepanantolis46066 жыл бұрын
I did the same conversion, and i don't know if the calculations are good but that seems impossible
@johanrosslee41336 жыл бұрын
i use www.agric.gov.ab.ca/app19/calc/crop/bushel2tonne.jsp 1 Hectare = 2.47 acre sop its 542.27 X 2.47=1339.40 Bushel per Hectare with is according to this site 34 ton.
@stjepanantolis46066 жыл бұрын
I thought the bushels are not correct, not the equation. Don't you think that this is a little bit too much?
@GenesisAg6 жыл бұрын
it seems like "too much" because it's a new world record.
@bobbyharvill42255 жыл бұрын
I knew the guy with the John Deere equipment would win. You could tell he was the smartest, by his equipment choice.
@miljanadudic56156 жыл бұрын
in my cantry with tractor for 7000 eura end 300 kg fertilizer ,14500 kg corn per hectar
@whiterazer16 жыл бұрын
How is this yield measured? 542.27 bushels means 13.774 metric tons per acre, so 34.03T per hectare. Is this only the corn kernel weight? Is this dry weight?
@GenesisAg6 жыл бұрын
shelled kernels only, dry weight. 15.5% moisture.
@robertreznik93306 жыл бұрын
It is not dry weight. It is what corn weighs with 15.5 % standard moisture. The dry weight is 28.75 MT/Ha. + 5.25 MT moisture. To sell corn by dry weight would be too simple for most farmers and grains men to understand. We have to cling to tradition. In the contest the yield is lbs grain harvested * (100-moisture)/(100-15.5). I learned this in 10th grade Vocational Ag. The NCGA contest started using this concept about the year 2000 before they used a chart that was a stair-step result.
@crazyhass846 жыл бұрын
What is his input cost per acre? U showed him spraying several times and using helicopter to spray! That's extremely expensive. Who cares if he made 542 if he didn't any more profile vs a guy with 400.
@SwoodmediaVA6 жыл бұрын
Have you actually done the math? I think you might be missing some numbers. Half of that yield makes good money, even with high cost inputs. Plus, I heard they only spray the competition stuff with the chopper. You gotta spend it to make it. #gobigorgohome
@GenesisAg6 жыл бұрын
it's a common question. he went over his cost per bushel on his last world record with me on video here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/i4imfXlmrd95ntE haven't had a chance to go over this latest with him on video yet.
@luischora57815 жыл бұрын
How much does a bushel weigh in kilos?
@GenesisAg3 жыл бұрын
Around 25 kilos give or take.
@zoranstijakovic8056 жыл бұрын
koliko biljki ima po kvadratu
@tyleradrian81276 жыл бұрын
Not a lot of grain storage for all of that grain and corn on corn yielding that? Plus if you don't calibrate correctly your yields will be off ha
@robertreznik93306 жыл бұрын
There is not much farm corn storage around here. In this country farms run 1 to 3 combines in a field so if each combine is harvesting 3,000 bu per hr., the on farm storage is overwhelmed when 8 semi trucks go to dumping. Our Coop has storage for 68 million bushels. They are equipped to dump in a few minutes, most farmers are busy harvesting.
@richardpierre726 жыл бұрын
I like this video. But as you already know. With rain their nothing going to grow
@reds68366 жыл бұрын
Please stop spraying and fertilizing with chemicals, killing life in the soil isn't helping you, your family and your family to come. Start thinking long term. Check out Gabe Brown an David Brant.
@TheJackpal6 жыл бұрын
This corn is GMO corn. Only used for consumption in the US. Other countries do not allow it imported because of the residue of the heavy chemical application and the health issues associated with that.
@interman77156 жыл бұрын
Jack Palmer Yanks will eat anything .
@Griffin_Farms6 жыл бұрын
Jack Palmer I’m sorry but this is a false statement. The entire world uses GMO plants and chemicals and there is nothing wrong with making more with less. GMOs are not harmful whatsoever. They only change the genetic structure of the plant in order to deal with conditions such as drought, Ect. These chemicals do not stay in the plant for long periods of time whatsoever. Without GMOs and chemicals, we would not be able to keep up with the demand for agricultural products
@interman77156 жыл бұрын
Griffin Farms The entire world does not use GMO ,a lot of countries will not even import them.Show me a long term INDEPENDENT study on the effects of gmo foods, say 30 years etc not just a 3 month study on rats and cows . GMO seeds were only produced so Monsanto etc could sell their own chemicals to spray on their own chemical resistant crops ie roundup ready soybeans for example ,you are locked into a system and you don't even realize it. Just check out who runs the FDA and passes all this shit ,half of them on the board are shareholders in these companies ! If the labeling laws got passed and people had a choice whether to buy GMO food it would be the end of it .Please do some study on the subject .
@Griffin_Farms6 жыл бұрын
interman 77 You are illiterate toward this entire concept. People like you are going to eventually get these GMOs outlawed, and then you can watch people starve to death. Cause like I said beforehand, there is no way to supply enough food for the current population without the use of GMOs.
@bbbbbb98173 жыл бұрын
Amca
@firstname62086 жыл бұрын
short pants short sleeve shirt handling toxic chems and not one PPE in sight. ahem!! hello OSHA- where are thou! come on people, face shield, rubber gloves rubber apron, high rubber boots minimum. possible respirator too.
@GenesisAg6 жыл бұрын
i guess enough of anything could be considered toxic. serious question: would you wear a respirator to handle compost tea? humic acids?
@firstname62086 жыл бұрын
i am just saying set the right example if you want everyone to watch! i don't care what it is, if it splashes in your eyes it won't end well. one trip to the emergency room pays for lots of PPE! and that is time not spent spraying during peak time. congrats on the outstanding yield!
@GenesisAg6 жыл бұрын
Roger that. I understand what you're saying. I think they are sensitive to fact that people are watching...but from my perspective I prefer they just show what really happens -- with all of the warts. So people are getting the real deal -- the unvarnished truth is more relate-able and usually more a lot more interesting. p.s. all of this footage and the interviews were taken from the corn wars documentary that followed five growers who entered crops in the the 2017 NCGA yield contest.