Soybean farmers should consider these strategies before heading to the field

As soybean planting ramps up across the country, agronomists have some things farmers should consider before heading to the field.

“Soybeans have the ability to – if there’s less plants per acre – they can branch out. But also, when you start branching out too much . . . (depending on other factors) you might not have as many pods per branch; you kind of have to give and take. Soybeans are indeterminate so they have the ability to (if there’s more space) continue growing. If growing conditions are correct – they’ve got the right day length, and we’ve still got good growing degree units – they can keep growing in their vegetative stage. But once we hit a certain day length they’re going to switch over to reproductive [stage]: more branches, potentially more pods,” said Tina Sullivan.

If your meteorologist is forecasting either a wetter or drier growing season, agronomist Logan Simon says that is something growers should take into consideration.

“There’s always that trade-off where we’re trying to balance maximizing the potential of that crop out there with also being on the conservative side, knowing that if we have more plants out there and they’re spaced more closely together, we’ve got greater competition, or potential for competition, with water.”

Related Stories
The Farm Bureau urges trade enforcement, biofuel growth, fair input pricing, and pro-farmer policy reforms to restore long-term certainty.
RaboResearch says China’s pivot from mass production to innovation-driven growth could reshape global pesticide supply chains — and influence prices and product access for U.S. farmers in the coming years.
Recent U.S.–China trade developments provided a small lift for soy markets, though most traders are waiting for concrete purchase data before making major moves.
Wheat futures briefly hit a three-month high before retreating as the markets wait for word on whether the deal will actually happen.
Expect modest relief on several produce lines, mixed protein trends into holiday buying, and softer veg-oil costs — a good week to sharpen forward buys selectively.
According to Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins, the top three soy-crushing companies in Bangladesh agreed to buy $1 billion worth of U.S. soybeans over the next year.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Rising federal debt is increasing pressure on Washington to limit spending, which could tighten future funding and delivery for agricultural programs.
“I’m not sure where this bridge goes,” trader Brady Huck with Advanced Trading told RFD-TV News earlier this week.
CoBank’s 2026 Year Ahead Report cites global grain oversupply, easing inflation, rate cuts, and major data center growth that could reshape rural America.
Plan for sharp, short-term volatility after unexpected outages; permanent closures rarely trigger major price spread disruptions.
Agriculture Shows
Hosted by Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady and RFD News Markets Specialist Tony St. James, Commodity Talk delivers expert insight into the day’s ag commodity markets just before the CME opens. Only on RFD-TV and Rural Radio SiriusXM Channel 147.
A look at the news, weather and commodities headlines that drove agriculture markets in the past week.
Everything profits from prairie. Soil, air, water — and all kinds of life! Learn how you can improve your land with prairie restoration, cover crops and prairie strips, while growing your bottom line.
Special 3-part series tells the story of the Claas family’s legacy, which changed agriculture forever.