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2025 PRODUCT GUIDE | EAST & WEST

SILAGE CORN & GRAZING GUIDE

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Leading growers know that hybrids must go beyond field appearance and deliver what matters most: greater yield, enhanced disease resistance, and the ability to thrive under varying environmental conditions to maximize profitability and sustainability.

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RISING ABOVE THE ELEMENTS:

KEY STRATEGIES FOR A RESILIENT 2025 GROWING SEASON 

BY: CARRIE MACLEAN, SALES AGRONOMIST, PRIDE SEEDS 

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RISING ABOVE THE ELEMENTS

 

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RISING ABOVE THE ELEMENTS Key Strategies RISING ABOVE THE ELEMENTS Key RISING ABOVE THE ELEMENTS

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Looking for Agronomic insights from the field?

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  • MICROMANAGEMENT THAT MAKES CENTS!

    Stephanie Myslik, sales agronomist with Pride Seeds, is using NutriAg’s NutriAnalytics system to enhance fertilizer recommendations for corn and soybeans. Through tissue tests and data analytics, her research helps farmers understand nutrient interactions and hybrid-specific returns, aiming to optimize yields while minimizing costs.
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  • Corn School: Is there a Link between Seed Size and Yield Potential?

    Does the seed size impact the potential yield growers can expect to combine? On this episode of the RealAgriculture Corn School, PRIDE Seeds agronomist Olivia Noorenberghe notes that all seed, regardless of size, carries the same genetic yield potential.
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  • Matching Silage Hybrids to Field Potential

    In this episode of RealAgriculture's Corn School, Aidan Filipchuk of Pride Seeds discusses some of the contributing factors to choosing a silage hybrid. Matching the final use, such as for just silage or for grazing, and for dairy or beef cattle, with standability and growing season length will have a direct impact on the eventual success of the crop
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  • Building a Genetic Defence for Tar Spot

    As tar spot continues to spread northeast across Ontario's corn region, growers are looking to build a better defence against the yield-robbing leaf disease. Crop genetics and fungicide will likely be the one-two punch growers use to control the disease, which is characterized by tar-like speckling on the upper surface of corn leaves. The fungal pathogen has been delivering yield hits ranging from 20 to 60 bushels per acre (in highly infected fields) since it was first identified in Indiana and Illinois in 2015.
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  • Fertility and nutrient management from soil to stalk

    Effective fertility and nutrient management begins with a grower understanding each fields' soil type, as this plays a large role in the cation exchange capacity (CEC), which is the main tool for managing nitrogen holding capacity and will impact fertilizer application timings, says Aidan Filipchuk of PRIDE Seeds.
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  • The Tales Tillers Tell

    In this Corn School, Aidan Filipchuk of PRIDE Seeds explains that tillers can be a sign of ideal growing conditions. A lot of sunlight and an abundance of nutrients is one of three potential causes. Another source of tillers, otherwise known as suckers, is early stress in the corn. Wind, hail, insects, or being run over by the sprayer, can all cause stress to the emerging plants.
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  • Three Key Practices to Tackle Corn Rootworm

    Corn rootworm (CRW) has become an increasingly prevalent pest for Ontario and Quebec continuous corn growers. Significant yield losses can occur from CRW larvae, as feeding larvae will clip the corn plant’s roots which causes inhibition of water and nutrient uptake early on, as well as lodging later in season. It is estimated that up to 18% yield loss can be expected per node of roots clipped1.
    Read More
  • It’s time to talk fungicides

    With recent showers, extended periods of overcast and humidity, we should be aware to scout corn fields that have faced extended periods of leaf wetness and helped support the infection of the Tar Spot disease in Southern Ontario this season.
    Read More
  • How to determine when to harvest your grain corn

    Dave DenBoer, Product Development Manager for PRIDE Seeds discusses the various tests he does as he scouts grain corn fields. It is important to make sure you have good intactness in your stocks. These test help to determine when to harvest your field.
    Read More

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