date:Sep 26, 2012
to consider hybrids that are more stress-tolerant, Elmore says.
Take a wide range of conditions into account. I'd probably want some of the ones that do well in best environments, but the majority would be the ones that year-in and year-out, good or bad location, do just fine, he says. They may not be the stars, but they don't fall apart. You put the high performers in poor environments, they'll fall apart.
Don't assume weather conditions will improve next year and select hybrids that won't p