Double Crop Soybeans: Ontario's Breakthrough Yield Strategy #shorts
Why It Matters
The approach could unlock an additional harvest cycle, increasing soybean output and farmer profitability in Ontario’s marginal northern zones.
Key Takeaways
- •Short-season soybean varieties enable viable double‑crop systems in Ontario.
- •Success hinges on early planting and open fall conditions.
- •Elora Research Station demonstrated record yields for 2025 double crops.
- •Traditional varieties often fail to mature, reducing profitability.
- •Adoption requires careful variety selection and precise timing.
Summary
The video discusses a breakthrough in achieving double‑crop soybean systems north of London, Ontario, where finishing two soybean crops in a single season has long been a challenge.
Researchers at the Elora Research Station and other sites found that planting the shortest‑day, shortest‑season soybean varieties—often labeled “triple‑zero” or even shorter—allows the crops to mature before the first frost, provided planting occurs early and the fall remains frost‑free.
“We really did… and a couple of other sites as well,” the presenter notes, highlighting record‑breaking yields in 2025 that surprised many agronomists. Traditional varieties, by contrast, frequently fail to reach maturity, eroding profitability.
If growers adopt these ultra‑short‑season seeds and align planting schedules with favorable fall weather, double‑crop soybeans could become a viable strategy to boost farm income and improve land use efficiency across Ontario’s cooler regions.
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