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Register by Feb. 2 for wheat management program

The Great Lakes Yield Enhancement Network provides research and benchmarking to help growers hit yield potential.

January 31, 2024

3 Min Read
Farmers talking on wheat field
GROWER REPORTS: Every farm involved in the Great Lakes YEN shares soil, tissue and whole plant analysis for comparison and benchmarking. Dejan_Dundjerski/Getty Images

Wheat growers interested in becoming part of the Great Lakes Yield Enhancement Network must register soon for the 2024 opportunity to learn more about growing wheat and hitting yield potentials.

For growers interested in participating, registration closes Feb. 2. To register or for more information on Great Lakes YEN, visit greatlakesyen.com or look for the hashtag #GreatLakesYEN.

Every farm involved in the Great Lakes YEN shares soil, tissue and whole plant analysis for comparison and benchmarking. Growers receive reports specific to their field at the end of the season, allowing the opportunity to learn more about how their wheat crop develops and produces yield, and how they compare to their peers.

Growers must be registered and submit the $300 participation fee before the program launch in late February.

“We have a lot of work to get done to get growers their boxes with all the materials needed to take the samples, including preaddressed and stamped envelopes,” says Jody Pollok-Newsom, executive director of the Michigan Wheat Program, the checkoff program collaborating to bring the Great Lakes YEN to wheat farmers. “We also need to get first-time participants set up with access to the database so they can enter their selected YEN field. We need everything ready to go before growers head out into the fields this spring — and it’s anyone’s guess when that will happen.”

Wheat insight

All of the organization and work put into the program has been grower-driven since the beginning of YEN in 2012 in the United Kingdom.

“With three years under our belt, we have come a long way and have learned a lot about how wheat grows and produces yield,” says Dennis Pennington, YEN collaborator and Michigan State University wheat specialist. “The data we collect and report back to participants is proving to provide valuable insights to their farm operation and identify management practices that would improve yields.

“In 2023, much of the grain fill period was cut short due to below-normal rainfall or even drought conditions across the YEN region,” Pennington adds. “Despite that, we set a new record-high yield in the YEN at 173 bushels per acre.”

As the fourth year of Great Lakes YEN gets underway, it’s already proving to be a program that encourages farmers to try new things and learn from wheat growers across the Great Lakes region.

Every field is different and has different yield potential based on a multitude of factors, such as environment (rainfall, sunlight), soil (water-holding capacity, nutrient level) and management (inputs used and timing). Growers are responsible to enter their data throughout the growing season.

Once harvest is complete, data is compiled and reported back to each participant via a field-specific written report, as well as through regional events. Individual farm data will be specific to each grower and is safeguarded and not reported back to anyone except that grower.

This data-heavy program is expensive, and sponsors are welcome to help offset some of the expenses.

Companies interested in joining the Great Lakes YEN as sponsors are asked to reach out to the Michigan Wheat Program (Jody Pollok-Newsom at [email protected]) or Grain Farmers of Ontario (Alexandra Dacey at [email protected]).

Source: MWP

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