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| My opinion is that if you're going to take the risk, you better make sure that you wait and get your crop off to a good start before you take that risk. You never know what mother nature will throw at you. Heck, here in northwest Kansas, where we only get an average of 18" of rainfall we had a wet spring which prevented many people from planting as much sorghum as they wanted to. We also had a wet fall which prevented many people from planting as much wheat as they wanted to. Who would have thought? In our area you're usually concerned with getting it in the ground before the ground bakes so hard that the planter/drill won't go in the ground.
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