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    #16
    Iron is the most toxic element the thin
    soil prairies has ever seen. In my vr
    prescriptions tillage erosion has become
    the key driver for zone establishment.
    Not only does good soil move off certain
    areas, but eventually poor sub soil
    will start to cover highly productive
    topsoil. There are several areas of the
    world that routinely have to move good
    soil back up hill, I don't know about
    you but that is daughnting task even on
    my relatively small acreage.

    Comment


      #17
      Tillage done correctly has very little negative impact
      on soil structure, its when guys disk sandy loam
      relentlessly or excessively work ground that is already
      black. A organic farmer realizes tillage is not fit for
      every piece of land, thats where crop rotation comes
      into play. For example I have a quarter with a sand
      ridge right through it, I tried to farm it both
      organically and conventionally with little success
      unless fert rates were increased significantly ($$),
      roll it into alfalfa hay production and that land is
      netting more $/ac now then it could even farmed
      conventionally. I have soil tests that show this land
      thrives in forage production.

      I also beg to differ regarding fuel use in organic
      farming, in my area where zero till doesnt work for
      everyone fuel costs are significant for both the organic
      and conventional farmer. I am curious as to what these
      new fancy sp sprayers burn per ac?

      Organic production isn't the perfect answer I am well
      aware of that but to me its the better alternative right
      now, dump 100's gallons of chemical with unknown long
      term affects into the soil or more co2 into the air
      (debatable imho). Maybe GMO and conventional crops could
      be used for cleaner fuel?

      Comment


        #18
        Pourfarmer,

        Just did 2000ac on 100gal. .05gal/ac.

        No till seeding is 20ac/hr @ 12gal/hr including loading
        time. .8gal/ac for seeding/ crop tending.

        I plowed some grass sod down a few years back with a
        flip over plow. 2 gal/ac isn't had to burn up. 5 bottom
        flip over made a 225hp tractor work... then not done...
        discing 2 times... harrowing... cost was over $50/ac
        for breaking. 1 pass of glyphosate and seed. cost is
        $10/ac... and the soil stays rooted.

        Climate change would be 5 times worse... if no zero till
        in western Canada. We will figure out better ways of
        controling weeds... WITHOUT tillage. Kill the
        germinations of weeds...would be the #1 choice.

        Cheers!

        Comment


          #19
          I sprayed grassland with 600 gr/ac
          glyphosate in the morning and seeded with
          disc no till in the afternoon. 30 year
          old forum software or i would show you
          beautiful oats growing thru the brown
          completely undisturbed grass.

          Now THAT'S organic farming.

          Comment


            #20
            Its a complex system Kaiser, recent
            reports of pork the same as the chicken.
            Its every where.

            In your beef too? Have you tested for
            MSRA?

            Comment


              #21
              I've seen 1 (or 2?) pass roundup and zero till canola
              into old hay stand in our area and it amounted to
              basically nothing... next year he was out there with a
              wishek and finishing disk... twice the crop... again in
              OUR area. To say zero till works everywhere is like
              saying organic farming will work everywhere... different
              areas call for different land management.

              I've always wanted to try a flip over plow.. for now will
              settle on a wishek: 240hp pulling 14ft wishek burns under
              1.5gal more if soft ground where disk sinks but still
              think under 2. How deep do those rollover plows cut?

              Comment


                #22
                pour,

                There must be a lot of tricks to them.

                It is 3ph... not as simple or as easy as it looks!

                I was not impressed... we had fescue sod and figured it
                to be the best way... WRONG!

                Many ways to get a crop going... WATER after
                seeding... a good seed bed... and no competition to
                smother the small plants : are the keys to making this
                work! Cross seeding helps lots of times... not going
                too deep.

                Comment


                  #23
                  Everyone is great at bringing farming practices down to personal experience on an their relatively infinitesmal level.

                  Try to bring the big picture of 9 billion into focus; or the obvious repercussions of realeasing stored CO2 from fosssil fuels; or chemistry and biology experiments that were dreamed of by only a handful 50 years ago....and no one knows where to wade in with their theories and ideas.

                  So most default back to beliefs and the rationalizations that their methods have been personally successful and the world's problems can't be much bigger than what those farmers have faced.

                  And maybe the "agricltural industry" is happy to fill fill that vacuum or void. They fill the papers with press releases; and steer their financial agenda through stategic lobbying; and all the Public Relations tricks and advertising that money can buy.

                  And no two (or especially three) farmers have been able to agree to stick together for their mutual benefit.

                  Just thinking.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Ok pourfarmer, i'll figure out how to
                    post a pic on this archaic sight.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Testing a link on combine forum

                      <a href="http://www.thecombineforum.com/forums/att
                      achments/planting-
                      tillage/12457d1370954824-pictures-crop-
                      seeded-pillar-laser-crop-2013-016.jpg"target="blank">
                      http://www.thecombineforum.com/forums/att
                      achments/planting-
                      tillage/12457d1370954824-pictures-crop-
                      seeded-pillar-laser-crop-2013-016.jpg</a>

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Sheesh kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk

                        Comment


                          #27
                          http://i1367.photobucket.com/albums/r792/yesgostop/IMG_04611_zpscd0be0e3.jpg

                          &lt;a href=&quot;http://s1367.photobucket.com/user/yesgostop/media/IMG_04611_zpscd0be0e3.jpg.html&quot;
                          target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;&lt;img
                          src=&quot;http://i1367.photobucket.com/albums/r792/yesgostop/IMG_04611_zpscd0be0e3.jpg&quot;
                          border=&quot;0&quot; alt=&quot; photo IMG_04611_zpscd0be0e3.jpg&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;

                          Comment


                            #28
                            Little baby oats just starting to peak
                            out, taken quite a while ago. Need to
                            take another.

                            Point is, you don't have to till the crap
                            out of it to get an excellent crop. Next
                            year will be peas, then flax. Then canola
                            or maybe barley then canola.

                            Comment


                              #29
                              Looks good! I agree zero till can work
                              real well, one of the best flax fields I
                              seen was a zero till hay field down by
                              regina. I've also seen 60bu organic
                              wheat on fallow land... Tillage works
                              well when working with the land, using
                              common sense, if your going to destroy
                              the soil to eliminate weeds its not
                              going to work well... My primary concern
                              with zero till is the amount of chem
                              used... that sand ridge quarter i spoke
                              of eariler would likely do half decent
                              in zero till scenario but when i push
                              the pencil between a zero till rotation
                              and organic forage based rotation, the
                              difference isnt worth the risk in my
                              opinion.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Let me try your pic:

                                Comment

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