Kentucky growers smash yield record with 107+ bushels/acre

university of kentucky soybeans
Meredith Farms smashed its own 2015 soybean yield record with 107.76 bushels per acre in 2017 — photo courtesy University of Kentucky

Kentucky growers set records in 2017 in the soybean yield contest hosted by the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, Food and Environment and the Kentucky Soybean Board.

Meredith Farms, owned by Philip and Lea Meredith in Henderson, produced the record-breaking yield of 107.76 bushels per acre in the full-season, irrigated category of the yield contest, according to a news release.

This is the first time a yield of more than 100 bushels per acre has been documented in Kentucky. It also smashed the previous record of 98.34 bushels per acre set in 2015, a record Meredith Farms also held.

The operation had two other entries top the 100-bushel-per-acre threshold in the 2017 year’s contest. They will be the first farm inducted into the Kentucky Soybean Board’s 100 Bushel Club.

“2017 was a record-breaking year for soybean production in Kentucky,” Davie Stephens, chairman of the Kentucky Soybean Board, said in the release. “In addition to the three, 100-bushel entries, many growers across the state (and our state as a whole) are experiencing record yields.”

The Kentucky Soybean Board will recognize all yield and quality contest winners at the Kentucky Commodity Conference in Bowling Green Jan. 18.”

Kentucky farmers also broke records in the double-crop, non-irrigated portion of the contest with two entries harvesting more than 80 bushels per acre.

Bruce and Jeremy Benson in Hopkins County recorded a yield of 91.84 bushels per acre. Scott Kuegel of Daviess County had a yield of 80 bushels per acre and placed second in the category. The Kentucky Soybean Board will induct the men into the 80 Bushel Club for double-crop soybeans.
“We thought these record yields might be out there in pockets, but we didn’t expect them to be so high,” said Carrie Knott, yield contest organizer and UK extension grain crops specialist. “These record yields were helped by excellent growing conditions that included timely rains throughout the growing season as well as producers’ management skills.”

To enter the contest, producers must harvest a minimum of 3 acres out of a field that is at least 10 acres. The county’s UK Cooperative Extension Service agent for agriculture and natural resources must be present to verify the yield. The Extension agent then sends each entry to Knott to verify yield calculations.

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