Rice Growing Program: Practical Guide for Global Paddy Production
By Ihumate
Table of Contents
- Crop Background and Variety Selection
- Soil Preparation and Establishment
- Nutrient Management
- Irrigation Recommendations
- Pest and Disease Management
- Harvest and Post-Harvest Handling
- Recommended Ihumate Products
- Sources
Crop Background and Variety Selection
- Define the system first: transplanted rice suits reliable water and transplanting capacity; direct-seeded rice saves labor but needs better land leveling, weed control and water timing.
- Match the market: long-grain indica, japonica, aromatic rice, glutinous rice or processing rice require different grain quality targets.
- Select varieties for the ecosystem: tropical lowland, temperate paddy, dry direct-seeded fields, saline soils and deepwater areas need different maturity and stress traits.
- Prioritize lodging resistance, blast and bacterial blight resistance, heat or cold tolerance, and maturity that fits the local rainfall and harvest window.
- Use clean seed, remove light grains and impurities, and apply locally registered seed treatment in high-risk areas to reduce seedborne and seedling diseases.
Soil Preparation and Establishment
- Test pH, organic matter, available N, P, K, silicon, zinc, sulfur and salinity before planting. Identify the yield-limiting factor before increasing nitrogen.
- Level the field. Uneven fields cause dry spots, stagnant water, uneven emergence, poor herbicide performance and uneven maturity.
- Repair bunds, inlet and outlet channels. Independent water control makes fertilizer, drainage and pest management much easier.
- For transplanted rice, use vigorous seedlings with white roots and suitable leaf age. Transplant shallowly and evenly to support tillering.
- For direct-seeded rice, prepare a fine seedbed and weed plan before sowing. Set seeding rate by variety, seed weight and germination percentage.
- Manage rice straw carefully. Heavy fresh straw incorporation can temporarily tie up nitrogen and create reduced soil conditions; adjust with incorporation timing, water control and starter nitrogen.
Nutrient Management
- Base fertilizer builds the crop, tillering fertilizer drives productive tillers, and panicle fertilizer supports spikelet formation and grain filling. Avoid late excess nitrogen.
- Split nitrogen instead of applying it all at once. Common timings are basal, active tillering and panicle initiation, adjusted by leaf color and crop vigor.
- Apply phosphorus mainly as basal fertilizer to support roots and early tillering, especially in cool, acidic or phosphorus-fixing soils.
- Potassium improves root strength, lodging resistance, disease tolerance and grain filling. Sandy soils, high-yield fields and straw-removed systems need close K management.
- Zinc deficiency is common in rice. In alkaline, cold, long-flooded or high-phosphorus soils, use EDTA Zinc by foliar spray or fertigation when symptoms appear.
- Supplement silicon, sulfur, magnesium and boron according to soil and tissue diagnosis. High-yield and lodging-prone fields need special attention to silicon and potassium.
- Humic acid is useful in low-organic-matter, saline, compacted or weak-root paddy fields to improve the root zone and fertilizer efficiency.
- Amino acids fit transplant recovery, cool cloudy weather, herbicide stress, weak tillering and the heading-flowering period.
- Seaweed extract can be used at tillering, stem elongation, panicle initiation and before stress periods to support root activity and stress recovery.
- Water-soluble and foliar fertilizers support the program but do not replace the main NPK plan for field rice.
Irrigation Recommendations
- Rice does not need deep water all season. Use shallow water after transplanting, moist soil for tillering, mid-season drainage when needed, and stable water at panicle and flowering stages.
- Keep shallow water after transplanting for recovery. Drain or dry moderately after target tiller number is reached to reduce unproductive tillers and lodging risk.
- Do not allow drought at panicle initiation, heading, flowering or early grain filling. Water stress here directly reduces fertility and grain weight.
- Where water is limited, use alternate wetting and drying. Re-irrigate at the safe threshold, but avoid severe drying during flowering.
- Drain around 7-10 days before harvest to improve field trafficability and harvest efficiency; do not drain too early on sandy soils or under hot dry conditions.
Pest and Disease Management
- Start with resistant varieties, clean fields, balanced fertilizer, suitable plant density and good water control.
- Weed competition is most damaging during the first 0-30/40 days after sowing or transplanting. Direct-seeded rice needs especially strong early weed control.
- Manage blast, sheath blight, bacterial blight and false smut through resistance, nitrogen balance, canopy ventilation and weather-based scouting.
- Scout for planthoppers, stem borers, leaf folders and thrips. Treat by field threshold, not only by calendar.
- Protect natural enemies and avoid unnecessary early broad-spectrum insecticide use. At low pressure, integrate bio-control products such as Bacillus thuringiensis, Beauveria bassiana and botanical products where locally registered.
- Rotate modes of action and follow local crop registration, dose and pre-harvest interval requirements.
Harvest and Post-Harvest Handling
- Harvest when most grains are yellow and firm. Too early gives many green grains; too late increases shattering, fissuring and lodging losses.
- Use 20-25% grain moisture or 80-85% straw-colored grains as practical indicators. Avoid harvesting when panicles are wet from rain or dew.
- Thresh, clean and dry quickly after cutting. Wet paddy in piles heats rapidly and causes mold, discoloration, odor and loss of seed vigor.
- Dry market grain to 14% moisture or lower; seed and long-term storage need lower moisture. Dry evenly and avoid overheating that causes fissures and broken rice.
- Remove impurities and unfilled grains before storage. Keep storage dry, ventilated, rodent-proof and insect-protected. Do not mix varieties or moisture lots.
Recommended Ihumate Products
- NPK 20-20-20+TE: for seedling, recovery, tillering and supplementary nutrition, used alongside the main field fertilizer plan.
- Humic Acid Organic Balls: for low organic matter, saline, compacted and weak-root paddy soils.
- Amino Acid Powder: for transplant recovery, cool stress, herbicide stress and heading-flowering support.
- Seaweed Extract: for tillering, panicle initiation and pre-stress crop support.
- EDTA Zinc: for rapid zinc correction in rice fields with deficiency risk.
- Bio-control Series: for integrated pest and disease programs with field scouting and local registration.
Sources
- IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank: Rice Growth and Field Management
- IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank: Nutrient Management
- IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank: Good Water Management Practices
- IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank: Pest and Disease Management
- IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank: Harvesting
- IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank: Drying
- UC Davis: Rice Production Workshop Manual
- Unsplash: Rice Field Image


