Well hopefully we can pick up a freak thunder storm here the next day or so.
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Canola cupping leaves! Drought or it just hit the gas!
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Even this morning it just missed us , getting good rains just NE of here .
Setting up an irrigation system today on the kids sweet corn field ...... it's going to need it . At least they can make a few bucks then ... lol
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Originally posted by Partners View PostYa right.Sf3's canola looks like poor germ.
My 8810 looks better than neighbors chicken hawk.
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Helmsdale...I was one of those "God forbid untouched pea stubble" guys. Seeded canola into it. It was dry and didn't work too bad but far from perfect. Some heavy residue in places, I guess that's what happens when you grow a 60 bu/ac pea crop the year before.... Like I'd ever know... never done it before that. I would bet the farm the germination results may have been dramatically worse if I did anything to it before seeding.
An eye opener here was a guy who seeded flax into lentil stubble that "protilled" parts of the field last fall.... you could see the spots that were done as plain as day.... just like you cut it with a knife...areas done versus areas left. Not that everywhere else on the field was perfect, just that everywhere it was tilled was that much worse! Too loose, too deep, too dry, I don't know....they're blaming it on cutworms! Re-seeded it.Last edited by farmaholic; Jul 2, 2017, 10:02.
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Originally posted by wiseguybuy a seedhawk and dump the bourgaults with mrb !
# seedhawk = perfect crop
It's not the machine , it's the guy behind the wheel .
BTW we will drive right by many excellent established canola seeded with all types of Bourgault drills .
Shoot your mouth off or come for a drive .....
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Originally posted by farmaholic View PostHelmsdale...I was one of those "God forbid untouched pea stubble" guys. Seeded canola into it. It was dry and didn't work too bad but far from perfect. Some heavy residue in places, I guess that's what happens when you grow a 60 bu/ac pea crop the year before.... Like I'd ever know... never done it before that. I would bet the farm the germination results may have been dramatically worse if I did anything to it before seeding.
An eye opener here was a guy who seeded flax into lentil stubble that "protilled" parts of the field last fall.... you could see the spots that were done as plain as day.... just like you cut it with a knife...areas done versus areas left. Not that everywhere else on the field was perfect, just that everywhere it was tilled was that much worse! Too loose, too deep, too dry, I don't know....they're blaming it on cutworms! Re-seeded it.
I drug my collector 5000 air drill through it and for 85-90% the coulter unit did a good enough job to keep the residue flowing through the drill. The other 10-15% was a bit of a headache. Spent a lot of time spinning pirouettes, and dragging plugs out with the shanks skimming the ground.
Efficiency measured in acres per day sure suffered, but in my neighborhood at least, intensive tillage is just to risky imo.
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Originally posted by wiseguyjust saying what i am seeing 24/7 !
canola not getting the n in the mid row band when shes dry !
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Originally posted by SASKFARMER3 View PostYou have to put starter and other fert with the seed safely up to 120 lbs then when it hits the gas wow does it pass the seed hawk. I owned one never ever ever again sorry to offend some but never ever again.
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Originally posted by helmsdale View PostFarma, I ran a coulter unit over my pea stubble that hardly looked like anything had been done but it sort of sized the vines and stubble into more manageable lengths. Most thought I needed to blacken the soil. I love the look of black soil, but it scares the shit out of me. Even in my short time, I've seen fields blow out so bad it's buggee, payloader, and dump truck territory to reclaim.
I drug my collector 5000 air drill through it and for 85-90% the coulter unit did a good enough job to keep the residue flowing through the drill. The other 10-15% was a bit of a headache. Spent a lot of time spinning pirouettes, and dragging plugs out with the shanks skimming the ground.
Efficiency measured in acres per day sure suffered, but in my neighborhood at least, intensive tillage is just to risky imo.
The MRB'S help somewhat with cutting long pea and cereal stubble.
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