SKU #60383
·
30 views
KWS PREMIS
Barley
KWSUser rating
0 votes0% positive reviews
No ratings yet — be the first.
Plant Type
Winter Barley, Spring barley
About product
KWS PREMIS is a barley variety offered in two forms: winter and spring, characterized by high yield and resistance to various diseases. Winter barley KWS PREMIS is distinguished by its high resistance to net blotch, powdery mildew, Septoria leaf blotch, yellow rust, net form of net blotch, and black leg, ensuring a stable yield even under unfavorable conditions. It is well-adapted to forest-steppe…
Plant Type
Winter Barley, Spring barley
Description
KWS PREMIS is a barley variety offered in two forms: winter and spring, characterized by high yield and resistance to various diseases. Winter barley KWS PREMIS is distinguished by its high resistance to net blotch, powdery mildew, Septoria leaf blotch, yellow rust, net form of net blotch, and black leg, ensuring a stable yield even under unfavorable conditions. It is well-adapted to forest-steppe zones and exhibits cold hardiness down to -12°C. The thousand seed weight ranges from 50.6 to 53.3 grams, with a sowing rate varying from 3 to 4.5 million seeds per hectare. The potential yield reaches 8 tons per hectare, while the protein content in the grain ranges from 10.2 to 12.5%.
Spring barley KWS PREMIS is recommended for cultivation in the Central Black Earth and Middle Volga regions, including the Penza, Samara, and Ulyanovsk regions, as well as the Republics of Mordovia and Tatarstan. This medium-maturing variety has a vegetation period of 73 to 90 days and is suitable for brewing due to high extractivity indicators up to 82.3% and grain uniformity from 97.2 to 99.7%. The thousand grain weight varies from 44 to 53 grams, and the protein content in the grain is 10.0-10.3%. Yield in these regions reaches an average of 48.2-59.7 centners per hectare, with maximum indicators up to 105.2 centners.
The KWS PREMIS variety is characterized by high resistance to lodging and drought, making it a reliable choice for various climatic conditions. Thanks to its disease resistance and resistance to harmful factors, as well as good drought resistance, it ensures a stable and quality yield. These properties make KWS PREMIS in demand for both industrial cultivation and specialized purposes, such as brewing.
Spring barley KWS PREMIS is recommended for cultivation in the Central Black Earth and Middle Volga regions, including the Penza, Samara, and Ulyanovsk regions, as well as the Republics of Mordovia and Tatarstan. This medium-maturing variety has a vegetation period of 73 to 90 days and is suitable for brewing due to high extractivity indicators up to 82.3% and grain uniformity from 97.2 to 99.7%. The thousand grain weight varies from 44 to 53 grams, and the protein content in the grain is 10.0-10.3%. Yield in these regions reaches an average of 48.2-59.7 centners per hectare, with maximum indicators up to 105.2 centners.
The KWS PREMIS variety is characterized by high resistance to lodging and drought, making it a reliable choice for various climatic conditions. Thanks to its disease resistance and resistance to harmful factors, as well as good drought resistance, it ensures a stable and quality yield. These properties make KWS PREMIS in demand for both industrial cultivation and specialized purposes, such as brewing.
Crop & resistance
Disease resistance
Specifications
| Plant Type | |
|---|---|
| Catalog | Catalog → Barley |
| Manufacturer | KWS |
| Originator | Kws Lochow |
| Originator | Kws Lochow , De |
| Patent holder | Kws Lochow |
| Country | Germany |
Store offers · 2 from 2 stores
Prices are updated on loadLoading offers…
Aggregator catalog: prices are collected automatically from store websites, normalized by AI and converted at the current exchange rate. Before ordering, confirm the price and availability on the store's website. This block is not indexed by search engines — the data is loaded after the page opens.
See also
Often considered together with this variety
Recently viewed
Similar items in this catalog section


























Comments · 0