We have received 5" of rain since Saturday and more in the forecast pushing us up near 30" above normal, more then double our normal rainfall for the year! Farmers are reporting yield 30-40% below normal but soybeans appear to have endured the heavy rains much better.
Just another reason not to put all your eggs in one basket and grow multiple crop types in each plot. Our clovers have absolutely thrived all year seemingly loving the cool wet weather and the cereal grain plantings this fall have largely done well thus far.
The brassicas are like the corn partially because they too love nitrogen and they need to "breathe" and cannot do so in waterlogged soils. Where ground is well drained they have lush full leaves...
But soils even a few inches lower are waterlogged and the brassicas are suffering...note the radical difference here from one side of the strip to the other.
Some roots are healthy and growing like this GroundHog forage radish root
While I found others where the plant was dead and the root dead and rotting...nothing we can do about the weather, some areas are dry and begging for even a hint of rain while we are literally awash in water.
Diverse plantings insure we don't end up with nothing! Any crops can drown but clovers with shallow root systems not requiring nitrogen can do well as can cereal grains planted in early fall. Their root systems will not be that extensive yet making them less vulnerable to water logged soils and they are all well adapted to dry soils and weather.
Consider planting blocks of strips of different crops in each field so all bases are covered and deer are never without great food sources and you'll have a better chance of holding them on your property year around, year after year... :way: