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This is a-maize-ing – Update 2

By
Home Inspector with Five Star Property Inspections

Day 2 - In the life of Mr. Maize

I am not going to be posting a picture everyday, but I just wanted to show the difference between day one and day two.  The corn plant more than doubled in size and at this rate, it will easily make the old farmers saying "knee high by the 4th of July".  I was once ask; when do you plant corn.....  "When I can set on the ground and my butt don't get cold" and you plant beans "when I can sit on the ground and my bare butt don't get cold"   funny but true.    

Corn Day 2

This Little guy can't wait...

 

Corn Spy

 

Maize physiology

The stems superficially resemble bamboo canes and the joints (nodes) can reach 20-30 centimetres (8-12 in) apart. Maize has a very distinct growth form, the lower leaves being like broad flags, 50-100 centimetres long and 5-10 centimetres wide (2-4 ft by 2-4 in); the stems are erect, conventionally 2-3 metres (7-10 ft) in height, with many nodes, casting off flag-leaves at every node. Under these leaves and close to the stem grow the ears. They grow about 3 centimetres a day.

The ears are female inflorescences, tightly covered over by several layers of leaves, and so closed-in by them to the stem that they do not show themselves easily until the emergence of the pale yellow silks from the leaf whorl at the end of the ear. The silks are elongated stigmas that look like tufts of hair, at first green, and later red or yellow. Plantings for silage are even denser, and achieve an even lower percentage of ears and more plant matter. Certain varieties of maize have been bred to produce many additional developed ears, and these are the source of the "baby corn" that is used as a vegetable in Asian cuisine.

Maize is a facultative long-night plant and flowers in a certain number of growing degree days > 50 °F (10 °C) in the environment to which it is adapted. Photoperiodicity (and lateness) can be eccentric in tropical cultivars, where in the long days at higher latitudes the plants will grow so tall that they will not have enough time to produce seed before they are killed by frost. The magnitude of the influence that long-nights have on the number of days that must pass before maize flowers is genetically prescribed and regulated by the phytochrome system.

The apex of the stem ends in the tassel, an inflorescence of male flowers. Each silk may become pollinated to produce one kernel of corn. Young ears can be consumed raw, with the cob and silk, but as the plant matures (usually during the summer months) the cob becomes tougher and the silk dries to inedibility. By late August the kernels have dried out and become difficult to chew without cooking them tender first in boiling water.

The kernel of corn has a pericarp of the fruit fused with the seed coat, typical of the grasses. It is close to a multiple fruit in structure, except that the individual fruits (the kernels) never fuse into a single mass. The grains are about the size of peas, and adhere in regular rows round a white pithy substance, which forms the ear. An ear contains from 200 to 400 grains, and is from 10-25 centimetres (4-10 inches) in length. They are of various colors: blackish, bluish-gray, red, white and yellow. When ground into flour, maize yields more flour, with much less bran, than wheat does. However, it lacks the protein gluten of wheat and therefore makes baked goods with poor rising capability.

A genetic variation that accumulates more sugar and less starch in the ear is consumed as a vegetable and is called sweetcorn.

Immature maize shoots accumulate a powerful antibiotic substance, DIMBOA (2,4-dihydroxy-7-methoxy-1,4-benzoxazin-3-one). DIMBOA is a member of a group of hydroxamic acids (also known as benzoxazinoids) that serve as a natural defense against a wide range of pests including insects, pathogenic fungi and bacteria. DIMBOA is also found in related grasses, particularly wheat. A maize mutant (bx) lacking DIMBOA is highly susceptible to attack by aphids and fungi. DIMBOA is also responsible for the relative resistance of immature maize to the European corn borer (family Crambidae). As maize matures, DIMBOA levels and resistance to the corn borer decline.

Yolanda Hoversten
Self Employed - O'Fallon, IL
Referrals for O’Fallon, IL & the Metro East

Well Robert, I just like corn steamed with lots of butter.  Is there going to be a big quiz coming up?  LOL

Yolanda

May 27, 2007 04:18 PM
Robert Cramer
Five Star Property Inspections - Belleville, IL
LOL...yup, better get busy.  Thanks for the comment.  I like corn roasted over an open fire.  Gonna be a while though, corn won't be ready untill the end of August.
May 27, 2007 04:30 PM