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skyemoor Moderator


Joined: Oct 16, 2004 Posts: 1422 Location: Appalachian Foothills of Virginia
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Pops Moderator


Joined: Apr 03, 2004 Posts: 6547 Location: My Grandkids' Farm
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Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2007 11:33 am Post subject: Re: [Food Production] No-till crops |
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Thanks Sky I hadn't been there in a while to see the new articles.
This study compares soil moisture between rolling, spraying and rolling/spraying at half label rate.
An incomplete kill seems to be the big problem, decreasing soil moisture as the cover continues growing. It looks like good planning of which cover to plant for which cash crop is key. Matching the best time to roll the cover with the right time to plant the crop.
I was suprised to read somewhere over 90 million acres in Latin America use some type of killed cover planting _________________ Make a plan and work it: |
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Pops Moderator


Joined: Apr 03, 2004 Posts: 6547 Location: My Grandkids' Farm
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Posted: Fri May 30, 2008 1:51 pm Post subject: Re: [Food Production] No-till crops |
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Bump _________________ Make a plan and work it: |
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Pops Moderator


Joined: Apr 03, 2004 Posts: 6547 Location: My Grandkids' Farm
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RedStateGreen Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Sep 16, 2007 Posts: 1328 Location: Oklahoma City, USA
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Posted: Fri May 30, 2008 2:28 pm Post subject: Re: [Food Production] No-till crops |
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Very interesting! _________________ Conservation is conservative
"Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in judgment." |
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Hagakure_Leofman Heavy Crude


Joined: Jan 02, 2008 Posts: 403 Location: out dispatching ronan...
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Posted: Fri May 30, 2008 5:32 pm Post subject: Re: [Food Production] No-till crops |
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People! Consider the Yeomans plow system. I posted about this with no interest...
It's an extraordinary plow system that yields multiple benefits for farming. The keyline plow effectively lifts the soil beneath the 'hard plate' (created through compaction etc) effectively allowing the soil bed to breath without disturbing the pasture on top. You can also mount a seeder on the device to allow for seeding directly into the fine cut grooves created by the plow. Then, you can plant anything you like directly into the pasture.
Our soils are complex micro-environments that we must protect and enhance. At the farm I studied this, with soil tests, they revealed a 1% to 5% increase in organic matter in a single year on the keyline plowed pastures. That's a massive effort in carbon sequestering on top of a huge increase in soil quality.
Keyline plowing is also performed, usually, along the contours of the landscape, rather than in straight lines along in parallel with fences. [See : Contour Plowing]This creates what basically amounts to small terraces, that slow water runoff and allow greater moisture penetration. This reduced the need to irrigate - especially from groundwater that is clearly unsustainable.
This is what a pasture looks like after a plow.
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Ludi NeoMaster


Joined: Dec 27, 2004 Posts: 12508 Location: zombie horde wonderland
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Posted: Fri May 30, 2008 5:37 pm Post subject: Re: [Food Production] No-till crops |
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| Hagakure_Leofman wrote: | | People! Consider the Yeomans plow system. I posted about this with no interest... |
I've recommended Yeoman's book a bunch of times!  _________________ No original ideas are contained in this post. |
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Hagakure_Leofman Heavy Crude


Joined: Jan 02, 2008 Posts: 403 Location: out dispatching ronan...
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Posted: Fri May 30, 2008 5:43 pm Post subject: Re: [Food Production] No-till crops |
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| Ludi wrote: | I've recommended Yeoman's book a bunch of times!  |
And that is because you are wise Wise WISE Ludi  |
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