Chuck Zumbrun

Tales from Skunk Hill

Catching the Rye

We grow a little of cereal rye for cover crop seed. It’s kind of like winter wheat, you plant it in the fall at the same time you’re planting wheat. But it comes ripe about 3 weeks after the winter wheat.

We harvested the rye last week.

Cutting Rye
Cutting Rye

It looks like wheat in this picture. It’s actually about 2 feet taller than wheat and has a bigger head with bigger grains.

More Rye
More Rye

Rye going into the combine.

This year we tried a couple of ‘high-management’ test strips in the rye. We use high-management practices on wheat; we spray for weeds as needed, spoon feed it nitrogen 3 or 4 or 5 different times, and apply fungicides at the precise times diseases are a threat.

It’s a lot a messing around, often when we’re trying to get other things done, but it’s the difference between 60 bushels per acre and 100 bushels per acre in wheat for us.

So we thought we’d try those same practices in rye this year. The main part of the rye field, where we just hit it with one pass of fertilizer and fungicide went 55 bushels to the acre. The high management part…

High management rye
High management rye

… went as high as 110 bushels to the acre and averaged about 95 bushels to the acre.

Like so many things, attention to the details matters.

4 responses to “Catching the Rye”

  1. Missy Avatar
    Missy

    Wow. That is a huge difference!

  2. Mom Avatar
    Mom

    Unbelievable yields. Surely extensive practice would call for hiring labor.

  3. anne Avatar
    anne

    so does the increased yield make up for the extra time and materials

  4. chuck Avatar
    chuck

    Anne, let me send you my spreadsheet analyzing that very issue…

    It’s a very interesting question, and it’s actually incredibly difficult to answer.

    Would we be money ahead to grow corn on those acres, sell the corn, and buy rye seed?

    I could (and should) write a book in answer to that question.

    I started to type an answer in this comment response, but I think it’s worthy of an entire blog post of its own.

    Watch for it coming soon on zumbrun.net!

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