FAQs
Related Videos
Huma Minute – X-Tend Enhancing Fertilizer with Cory Ritter
Huma Minute - X-Tend Enhancing Fertilizer with Cory Ritter - Huma Inc.
Learn More
Huma Minute – X-Tend on Soybeans with Steve Walmsley – Huma Inc.
Huma Mid-South Regional Sales Manager Steve Walmsley reports on a field trial with Huma X-Tend on Soybeans.
Learn More
Mid South Stories From The Field
Huma Gro® farming products increase yields; bring life into the soil; reduce soil salinity; treat chemical damage and water damage from flooding; stimulate plant growth; and strengthen plants against pests and disease. Farmers in
Learn More
Related Products
Related Case Studies
X-Tend® B With Micro Carbon Technology® Improves Barley Yield and Net Income: Year 3
Background Enhanced Efficiency Fertilizer (EEF) additives can improve crop production. Humates have been shown to improve crop yield. The Huma® EEF additive X-Tend® B is a concentrated Micro Carbon Technology® product derived from humates with high levels of organic acids and nutrients that is formulated to be blended in liquid fertilizers or to be impregnated
Effects of Huma® Products on N & P Stabilization in Sandy Soil
Objective To demonstrate the effects of Huma® products X-Tend®, Fertil Humus®, Fertil Soil®, and Zap® on the reduction of nitrogen and phosphorus leaching in Immokalee sandy soils. Background The leaching of nitrogen and phosphate fertilizers presents an ongoing problem in Florida soils. Agricultural amendments that reduce leaching when applied to soils or when mixed with
X-Tend® B With Micro Carbon Technology® Improves Barley Yield and Net Income: Year 2
Objective Determine the effect on barley yield of adding Huma® X-Tend® B to split applications of different rates of nitrogen fertilizer. Background Enhanced Efficiency Fertilizer (EEF) additives improve crop production. Humates have been shown to improve crop yield. The Huma® EEF additive X-Tend® B is a concentrated Micro Carbon Technology® product with high levels of
Related Blog Posts
Humic Acid Biostimulant Research by BHN Humic R&D Lab Scientists Published in Int’l Agronomic Journal
In its May 2021 issue, Frontiers in Plant Science published a research article by BHN Humic R&D Lab scientists Dr. Hiarhi Monda, Ryan Fountain, and Dr. Richard T. Lamar in collaboration with Dr. Amy McKenna of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Ion Cyclotron Resonance Facility, Tallahassee, Fla. The research, titled “Bioactivity of Humic Acids
From the Field: Why I Switched to MicroHumic® OM for Seed Lubrication
As a farmer and ag salesman at Huma, I’m always on the lookout for products that can make farming easier and more efficient. That’s how I first came across MicroHumic® OM at the 2024 Commodity Classic, right after I joined Huma. While working in our booth, I was chatting with our CEO, Lyndon Smith, when
The South Is Sweating and So Is The Corn
Just step outside. It's brutal. You’ll instantly know it’s “sweating season” across the South and much of the Midwest. Sure, temperatures are hot, consistently now in the upper 90s across the Delta. But it’s the humidity that instantly gets your attention and triggers sweat glands overload. The dew point - aka "the misery index" - indicates the temperature where dew forms: the higher the dew point, the more moisture is in the air. The National Weather Service defines dew points above 75 degrees as “oppressive.” That’s where we’ve consistently been across the Delta; most days reaching the upper 70s.