
Chase Perry
2.3K posts

Chase Perry
@chaserp1
Husband, Father of a 3. God, Family, Agriculture, Huskers. Channel SeedPro, Agronomy365 SP/BW Fusion dealer. Soil health first! CMP Enterprises LLC



Just came across this… what’s your thoughts folks? Haven’t listened to the full podcast, but I would say IA grows a lotta of corn because that’s what it’s best suited for? These pod casters sure love talking about glyphosate



Late corn planting can occur for several reasons such as weather and other factors. 🌽 Learn more about late planting recommendations: spr.ly/6014hDVvY


Let’s try this, nitrogen management is deeper than most think about in my opinion. Not posting this to argue. Posting this, to help you think deeper about what your nitrogen dollars are capable of.

Trying something new (and nerve wracking) to share my passion for all things soil fertility and plant nutrition. I’m on a mission to challenge “the way we have always done it” and help growers and other business owners move the needle on family farms today in a purposeful way. If you feel compelled, give the first two episodes (and the trailer) a listen! Likes, shares, comments, questions are welcomed! Available today (LAUNCH DAY) on Apple or Spotify!








Ground Truthing pt. 2 #BaselineRx @FaithLois12






Management Zones Your zones are only as good as the soil test used. You can have the best zones in the world, but if your test only measures the chemical side of the soil (Bray, Olsen, AA, Mehlich), you’ll keep chasing ppm values that don’t tell the whole story. You will just be managing numbers, not the system. The field changes. The biology changes. The chemistry changes. Your soil test should reflect all three. That’s why Baseline Rx starts by asking the soil what it can actually provide. Doing this allows for nutrient efficiency and getting more out of every fertility dollar spent.











