OSU Agriculture Field Days
Educational, Research-Based Events
OSU Agriculture Field Days are educational events presented by OSU Ag Research and Extension to share research-based information and resources with Oklahomans. Field days showcase current agricultural research and relevant best practices through presentations, tours, hands-on workshops and discussion at little or no cost.
2026 Field Days
Wheat & Forages Field Day
April 24, 2026
- 8:30 a.m.-1 p.m. at South Central Research Station (1105 E. Iowa Ave.) in Chickasha. Register by April 22.
- Topics will include wheat varieties, wheat hay forage yield and quality study, herbicide trials, nitrogen fertility and wheat breeding.
Lahoma Wheat Field Day
May 15, 2026
- 9 a.m.-1:30 p.m. at North Central Research Station (1 mile west of Lahoma on Highway 60) near Lahoma. Register by May 13.
- Topics will include wheat varieties, breeding, fertility, disease and pest and weed management. Continuing education units have been applied for, and lunch will be provided.
Turf & Landscape Field Day
Sept. 16, 2026
- The time is to be determined at the Turfgrass Research Center (3425 W. Virginia Ave.) in Stillwater.
- Stay tuned for topics.
Peanut & Cotton Field Day
Sept. 17, 2026
- 5-8 p.m. at Caddo Research Station (28054 County Street 2540) in Ft. Cobb. Peanut blasting will start at 2:30 p.m. Register by Sept. 10.
- Topics will include weed management, harvest aids in cotton, peanut varieties, soil fertility and irrigation management.
Livestock & Range Field Day
The October dates are not yet available.
- Will take place at research stations in the Oklahoma State University campus area in Stillwater, starting at Willard Sparks Beef Research Center (4224 West McElroy).
- Stay tuned for topics.
Other OSU Field Events
Stay tuned for the 2026 Wheat Plot Tours Schedule
A message from Dr. Senseman

“There is an interconnectivity between ag research and Extension, and we want to build on that interconnectivity. Our Field Days programming highlights OSU’s land-grant mission by bringing Extension and research together.”
- Dr. Scott Senseman