The_v
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Apr 05, 2026
It’s called Bi-color corn. It’s made by creating a hybrid between white and yellow corn inbreds. The seeds are all yellow. The resulting corn (F2 seeds) display a yellow:white ratio of 3:1.
The color has zero impact on flavor, texture or sweetness. It’s all for visual impact.
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I find that a string of swear words works wonders for many sites when they want to be all picky. Add in a random symbol/number and presto a "Secure" password.
YouMotherFuckingA$$hole1ShitBag.
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Dec 16, 2025
He’s also a dust mop for the warehouse.
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Dec 16, 2025
Don't touch my corn asshole.....
My wife’s fluffy white dog I drive around with for work. He likes to eat higher moisture corn and cow shit.
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Dec 16, 2025
The USDA-NASS is responsible for making an estimate of the number of corn cobs in the U.S. Most other countries have similar organizations.
To do so they send surveys out to ask farmers what they think. The farmers answer completely truthfully because lying would inflate the prices they get on their corn cobs.
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Dec 11, 2025
Trichoderma is the genus, there is currently 89 different species classified.
That being said, they did use the species that became a primary pathogen as an antifungal for many years. As soon as the species was identified as a primary pathogen the suppliers changed to another related species. They also claimed to have mislabeled the species on what they sold before (bullshit of course).
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Dec 10, 2025
It tastes like a corny mushroom. Do not try them from a jar. Those taste more like a slimy snot rag.
It’s an obligate parasite that enters the corn plant via tiny wounds when it’s the plant is small. The most common source of wounding is insect damage or wind. Sandy soil + wind creates the highest incidence. Once you find some hotspots it’s easy to find.
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Dec 10, 2025
Since corn is a critical crop in many regions its one of the most studied species on the planet. Even a post about shitty corn is interesting.
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Dec 10, 2025
Silage Corn - 14' (4.3m) tall
For silage corn the entire plant is harvested, chopped up, and packed tightly in a pile and covered with plastic or very large plastic bag. This creates an anaerobic conditions and yeasts/bacteria convert the sugars alcohol, then acids. This acid preserves the feed for cattle for up to 2 years.
Silage corn is the most common base feed for all dairies and feedlots.
This isn’t even the tallest variety out there. There are others that are 3’ (1m) taller.
The machine with the spout is a chopper. They are a million dollar gigantic woodchipper. These things are fucking terrifying and you should absolutely stay out the field when they are running. Every so often a deer jumps into them…shudder… nightmare fuel.
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Dec 10, 2025
Nobody spreads corn seed. It needs to be planted at least 1.5" deep.
It needs to be DRILLED in 2-3".
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Dec 10, 2025
lemmy.world/post/39983067
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Dec 10, 2025
I would sent you pictures of it but I don’t save smut to my phone.
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Dec 10, 2025
My and my 10,000 pictures of corn disagree. You need to see them all!!!
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Dec 10, 2025
It doesn’t just grow on the ears either. It often grows on the stalk or tassel.
Wait a bit until that little fella matures and then produces spores. It will be about 4x the size in those pictures. Bumping into them covers you in dark black spores that sticks around on your clothing.
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Dec 10, 2025
Damnit I forgot to mention that the trichoderma rot causes the kernals to suffer from premature-germination. The stress causes them to pop off too soon.
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Dec 10, 2025
When you start out thinking that you can can do it, but you can't, so you tip-back
Early in the season before a corn plant is waist high it takes a guess on how many kernals it can fill. Sometimes it guesses wrong and so it aborts the top kernals to fill the rest.
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Dec 10, 2025
How to find a bar bell corn cob for your fitness routine.
The entire top of the damn plant turns bright red.
As sugars build up in the top of the plant with no place to be transported to, the upper leaves start to turn bright red and die back.
You may get a bar bell ear or there may be no ear on the plant. In of field of millions of plants a bright red top narrows the search down.
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Dec 10, 2025
Wanna get in shape? Bar bell corn is the answer.
Start getting your pinky in shape with this weird environmental triggered trait. It’s easy to find in any corn field (to be continued…).
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Dec 10, 2025
Here's one of the most beautiful varieties of corn I have ever seen.
This right is 350bu/acre of corn. 113 day variety on an almost pure sand field. Every damn ear looked the same. Look at that beauty, every kernal is huge and dense.
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Dec 10, 2025
Not bad for a cell phone picture. Eventually I’m going to get myself a decent camera.
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Dec 10, 2025
Huitlacoche is quite tasty. I’ve had it several times in Mexico.
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Dec 10, 2025
It's really ugly but it's a sign of a healthy environment for soil microbes.
This here is trichoderma ear rot in an organic field. This 100 day variety was chewed on by an earworm. The damaged kernals allowed trichderma to enter and infect the ear. This ear rot produces many toxins and is a big no for consumption.
The twist - Trichoderma is usually a beneficial organism in the soil. It feeds on other pathogenic fungus/bacteria and is applied extensively for biological control.
Although normally a secondary pathogen, it has mutated to become a primary pathogen in both Italy and Germany in recent years.
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Dec 10, 2025
The ugly side of corn
This here is a genetically susceptible 113 day variety to fusarium kernal rot. This is a nasty little fungus that produces all sorts of mycotoxins that can give any mammal that consumes it a belly ache or even death. It’s easily identifiable by the white streaks in causes in the kernals.
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Dec 10, 2025
A lovely 98 Day variety for your viewing pleasure.
This 98 day little minx has a flirty pink cob. It doesn’t look like much but it packs quite the wallop. The ears posted yielded 302bu. Medium high ear placement and a fast drydown makes this an excellent choice for grain.
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Dec 10, 2025
So you want to post corn pictures. I've got you all covered.
This is pretty little 102 day number with a bright white cob that threshes very easily. It does extremely well for dry grain, high moisture grain or earlage.
The field in this picture averaged 305bu.
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Dec 10, 2025
It’s also a myth. Corn doesn’t have the biochemical pathway. It does however produce exudates from the roots that promote nitrogen fixing bacterial in some environments.
In most environments applying these bacteria does jack shit.
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