 One thing I've heard producers talk about is planting green wherever they've had winter cereal like we're a cereal rye or Triticale or winter wheat they really like that I It seems that every every one that I talked to you said we're gonna do that again Because they like that so much. In fact, I was just talking to a colleague just a couple hours ago He recalled the conversation with another producer and Who had called him and said you got to come see this you just got to come right in the tractor this is heaven and this was last year Planting planting soybeans in the green cover Well one thing for sure. I think everybody's just trying to make sure you have your equipment is ready As it can be and be ready to plant some less than ideal Environments probably and I think well like anybody that has a cover crop that's Overgrowing in the winter is probably gonna want to let that grow Right up to planting time for sure, you know, especially if you're planting soybeans into into a rye or winter wheat just just to try to maybe use up some of this excess moisture one of the nicest ways of planting beans that I like is actually into a cover crop of rye either flown on or drilled on and It can be four or five six foot tall that mat Will enable us to actually carry over wet ground Better and what we see is the water that does run off runs off clear We don't have that muddy stream and that mat will hold weeds and moisture the rest of the summer when I first started putting cover crops into like Wheat stumble and it was always I can't dry the ground out You can't dry the ground out because you're gonna need that moisture in the spring But if you think about it even in a normal year like where we're at after you combine that wheat and And then you plant corn in there or soybeans next spring before they really start using moisture If your soil even if the profile was empty Probably hold seven eight inches. Well, if you start looking at historical rainfall in our area You're probably at least four inches over what that soil Can hold I've yet to have my beans suffer Yield loss from using too much moisture with the rye. We compared to our neighbors or other fields We don't and the yields have been nearly identical Even including 2012 we ran Four or five bushels actually higher where we had the rye, but that year management try and win to kill it So in 2012 we killed that rye. It was less than 15 inches tall Some years we kill it at thigh high in May you got to watch where your seedbed moisture is you can dry that seedbed out too much But if the moisture is there we let it grow can be an issue with the planner you got to Move your residue managers up closing wheels if you've got any type of spike or anything on they can wrap We had that happen a couple times. So if it gets too tall we end up using the drill instead of the planner Like this spring we've got the planner in the drill We're going through now We'll put all new blades on the drill so that we're ready so that we can slice through that dull blades too much hairpinning And the other thing we find is timing of killing it We either want to plant into it dead brown or green if it's in that yellow stage. It's too raggy It just doesn't cut you don't get the seed in the ground properly