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Alex Harrell Shatters Soybean World Record With 218-Bushel Yield – Ohio Ag Net | Ohio’s Country Journal

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Alex Harrell Shatters Soybean World Record With 218-Bushel Yield – Ohio Ag Net | Ohio’s Country Journal

By Chris Bennett , Used with Permission from Farm Journal/AgWeb

At a freakish 218.2856 bushels per acre, Alex Harrell fired the soybean shot heard round the farm world. Mind-blowing yield. On Aug. 13, Harrell eclipsed his own world record of 206.7997 bushels, set in 2023. Back to back, he has grown the highest yielding soybeans in agriculture history.

The southwest Georgia farmer cut a bin-busting 218 bushels in the Georgia Soybean Production Contest. “At harvest, I thought I was in the ballpark of last year’s 206, but I never thought it’d be so high,” Harrell explains. “It’s an incredible result, but it’s a whole different story from last year.”

Changing the Formula

On 4,000 acres in Lee County, Harrell, 34, grows corn, soybeans, watermelons, and wheat. In 2024, a year after recording outrageous yields and breaking the 200-bushel barrier, Harrell aimed for the bull’s-eye again, but determined to change gears across the entire setup.

Photo Credits Farm Journal

On March 21, he punched a Pioneer P49Z02E variety (4.9 maturity group) at a 110,000-planting population into red clay watered by center pivot irrigation on the opposite end of the county from his previous year’s success.

Harrell was searching for a repeat performance in a separate environment, other than maintaining 30” rows. “Starting off, we used less preplant chicken litter,” he describes. “I used a different genetic trait and different herbicide trait—pretty much different everything, but still shot for the same result.”

Or far better.

Harrell ran double strip till at planting. First, a deep pass. Second, a shallow pass with banded fertility in front of the planter. “We still ran in-furrow, and 3-x-3 fertility on the planter; we sprayed pre-emerge herbicide out the back. Basically, we had four things going out at planting: seed, an in-furrow mix, a 3-x-3 mix, and a herbicide mix broadcast out the back.””

“We utilized Enlist. We used weekly tissue sampling, then Y-dropped and foliar fed accordingly. Again, almost everything changed from 2023 (Asgrow 48X9).”

Grain Fill Glory

At planting, Harrell chose five fields to push high-yield soybeans. Ten days after planting, Harrell scratched four of the fields from high-yield production due to emergence timing. “My loamy, lighter dirt, usually the easiest to get a stand with, had just got too much rain and it sealed over and couldn’t breathe. But the red clay, usually the hardest to get a good stand on, got the right rain, and didn’t seal up. The red clay field had the best emergence and spacing as I’ve ever seen.”

Photo Credits Farm Journal

To read the full story, visit: https://www.agweb.com/news/crops/soybeans/alex-harrell-shatters-soybean-world-record-218-bushel-yield

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