October 22, 2024

Golden Harvest rolls out top-performing seed lines for 2025

MaxScript recommendations are based on data-driven analytics and grower inputs, allowing farmers to select the best products at the right population in the right field.

BOONE, Iowa — It’s a dynamic time for agriculture with farmers using customized seed recommendations, combining product characterization, agronomic expertise and unique field insights to get the right product, at the right population, at the right placement to maximize their acres.

Golden Harvest and GHX spokespeople will be available at the 2024 Farm Progress Show, Aug. 27-29 in Boone, Iowa, to provide the latest on these efforts, plus details on the new 2025 lineup of top-performing corn hybrids and soybean varieties that help drive greater on-farm success.

Visit the Golden Harvest and GHX tent — Booth 702 — to learn about:

• The launch of the GHX 2.0 app, with new Cropwise AI, which gives users the ability to ask and get answers to the toughest product and agronomic questions while simplifying the way they manage data, and Crop Health Reports that include crop development staging, weather summaries and more.

• How MaxScript custom seed recommendations are maximizing yield and profit potential, helping farmers plant the right hybrids, at the right population, with the right placement — all for one flat price per acre.

• New Golden Harvest corn hybrids built for broad adaptability, strong agronomics, great late-season health and top-end yield potential.

• Trait Solutions for pest control, simplicity and choice that target yield-damaging above- and below-ground insect pests. No competitive stack controls more than DuracadeViptera, and new advancements are coming.

• Golden Harvest soybean varieties that combine trusted genetics with flexible trait choice, and how Gold Series soybeans help farmers take on the toughest agronomic challenges.

AgriNews Staff

AgriNews Staff

The Illinois AgriNews and Indiana AgriNews staff is in the field each week, covering topics that affect local farm families and their businesses. We give readers information they can’t get elsewhere to help them make better farming decisions.