Trouble is, when you farm, you HAVE to offset the exports from your soil
with something from off farm, or it is not sustainable. That is why
research dollars are not funneled into that segment of agriculture so
much.
When we export all these nutrients off our farms, the soil does not
magically rejuvenate; We need to replenish it. Not by tilling, or
"resting" it, but by importing nutrients from somewhere else.
I don't think there is a choice. Productivity has gone through the roof,
soil is being rebuilt. There always will be fuzz problems leaf disease,
sclerotinia:
It is called rotation. Glyphosate is one of the MANY MANY tools I can
choose or not choose to use. Use it wisely, use it sparingly. Many guys
like an aesthetically clean field, not economically clean. An example is
if you are growing LL canola. Most guys still do a pre-burn. For what???
You can zap everything out there when the canola is emerging, save some
cash, save herb rotation issues, etc. But no, it has to be as clean as
Geralds out there for the two weeks between seeding and in crop time...
But no, the fields need to look like a weed free place for the neighbors
to see, economics be dammed. Who is the better farmer, the guy using
glyph sparingly, or the guy rotating properly? Yet the guy with the
short term "messy" looking fields gets laughed at, gets landlords
talking...
Cover crops are all the rage in the states right now: Last year, I had
one unseeded 1/4. I could be like everyone else, and panic and spray the
crap out of it 4 times, or I could take advantage of the situation, and
allow for some green on the field, and spray only when absolutely
necessary. I ended up spraying it once to prevent weed seed production,
got a cover crop in the process, and my soil says thank you!
I think glyph is definitely being over used. Some guys spray it on their
wheat as a matter of course, needed or not for perennial weed control.
Some guys spray fungicides as a general rule, or spray for "bugs" cuz
the neighbor did.
We as farmers need to get off our duffs, get out in the fields, and see
what they need, not relying on coffee row gossip, perceptions of others,
or worse still, relying on crop scouts cuz we have grown so dang big we
no longer have the time to scout. Like, are we serious? No time to
scout??? lol!
End rant. It is just I was talking to my neighbor. He plans to spray for
"that disease" in his canola this year, cuz Clem down the road did last
year. How some of these guys operate is beyond me. How they have gotten
to the point where they are farming big acres, driving flashy machinery,
with the lack of knowledge they have about farming can only be answered
one way. Thankfully their wife has a high paying job! lol
with something from off farm, or it is not sustainable. That is why
research dollars are not funneled into that segment of agriculture so
much.
When we export all these nutrients off our farms, the soil does not
magically rejuvenate; We need to replenish it. Not by tilling, or
"resting" it, but by importing nutrients from somewhere else.
I don't think there is a choice. Productivity has gone through the roof,
soil is being rebuilt. There always will be fuzz problems leaf disease,
sclerotinia:
It is called rotation. Glyphosate is one of the MANY MANY tools I can
choose or not choose to use. Use it wisely, use it sparingly. Many guys
like an aesthetically clean field, not economically clean. An example is
if you are growing LL canola. Most guys still do a pre-burn. For what???
You can zap everything out there when the canola is emerging, save some
cash, save herb rotation issues, etc. But no, it has to be as clean as
Geralds out there for the two weeks between seeding and in crop time...
But no, the fields need to look like a weed free place for the neighbors
to see, economics be dammed. Who is the better farmer, the guy using
glyph sparingly, or the guy rotating properly? Yet the guy with the
short term "messy" looking fields gets laughed at, gets landlords
talking...
Cover crops are all the rage in the states right now: Last year, I had
one unseeded 1/4. I could be like everyone else, and panic and spray the
crap out of it 4 times, or I could take advantage of the situation, and
allow for some green on the field, and spray only when absolutely
necessary. I ended up spraying it once to prevent weed seed production,
got a cover crop in the process, and my soil says thank you!
I think glyph is definitely being over used. Some guys spray it on their
wheat as a matter of course, needed or not for perennial weed control.
Some guys spray fungicides as a general rule, or spray for "bugs" cuz
the neighbor did.
We as farmers need to get off our duffs, get out in the fields, and see
what they need, not relying on coffee row gossip, perceptions of others,
or worse still, relying on crop scouts cuz we have grown so dang big we
no longer have the time to scout. Like, are we serious? No time to
scout??? lol!
End rant. It is just I was talking to my neighbor. He plans to spray for
"that disease" in his canola this year, cuz Clem down the road did last
year. How some of these guys operate is beyond me. How they have gotten
to the point where they are farming big acres, driving flashy machinery,
with the lack of knowledge they have about farming can only be answered
one way. Thankfully their wife has a high paying job! lol
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