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Protec coating lentils

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    Protec coating lentils

    Has anyone used Protec pulse seed coating for treating
    and inoculating your lentils?

    We are going to try it this year on our red lentils. I
    have heard from a few people who have used it and
    liked it in the past.

    I

    #2
    total waste of money Jag. Been there done that.

    Comment


      #3
      NOT A TOTAL WASTE OF MONEY, we do it on all our peas & all our lentils. For us its a management tool I know that the seed is treated, has a good bug count and my dad & hired man dont have to haul around bag of granular.

      Does it work better than granular? i dont know but its not any worse and its roughly the same price on the peas maybe a little cheaper & if you are using peat or liquid it will cost more but at least you know the bug count is there.

      Comment


        #4
        The only way it is advantageous is on virgin
        ground possibly. Ensuring high bug counts early
        on is obviously good. Used for a couple years
        way back. Trials side by side showed no
        difference. Then again last years trials with NO
        innoculant showed zero difference on ground
        that had been treated with rhizobia 6 times over
        a 15 year period. Not that i am advocating zero
        innoculant but found it interesting. 24 hr
        window is plenty adequate imo.

        Comment


          #5
          We used it last year with very good results.
          We had quite a few side by side trials and the best results were with the Protec treated seed.

          It might just have been less splitting in the airstream but we definitely saw improvement and are doing more this year.

          We were using Tag Team granual and Apron max, now going with TT peat Protec and AM

          No bags to throw.
          Did I mention NO BAGS TO THROW!

          Comment


            #6
            Im pretty sure the improved results are not a result of protec. But spend your dimes where you want to. I've seen trials done where $1.50/ACRE cheap liquid out performed all the high dollar granulars, tagteams and peats. Bugs are bugs once they are introduced they survive longer than one year. I have neighbors who haven't inoculated a lentil crop in 3 years after repeated innoculation for 10 years or more. There has been no drop off in yield or N fixation to this point. Not sure I have the nerve for that tho. I'm getting a little perturbed at all the snake oil salesman coming around this spring so possibly Im just a little more skeptical than some.

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              #7
              WE used it last year and was very happy. One man seeding lentils and no messing around with inoculant in the wind. Very uniform application, which i can not say for seed applied at the drill. WE seeded right around the 30 day mark and had good nodulation, but could simply be backgroung rhizobia. DId it again this year.

              Comment


                #8
                Not saying its a bad idea. Only saying it is pricey
                for what ypu get. we batch treat inthe yard so
                no messing on tbe field at any rate. I can save
                over 15000 a year by being a little proactive with
                how i do things in the inoculating game.

                Comment


                  #9
                  This year the price is not bad at $7 bu using tag team
                  incoculent included and they are applying my apron
                  max at the same time. Works out to $5.83 acre with a
                  50 pound seeding rate of red lentils. Cheaper than
                  granular.

                  If it works with the same relults I will be more than
                  happy.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    hmmm not to bad. 50 ib seeding rate of red lentils Whats your target plant count at that rate? What variety? Haven't seeded the larger reds like maxxim/redberry at under 65 Ibs for years.

                    Comment

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