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Originally posted by wiseguyGod bless Seedhawk and Seedmaster !
with their mrb and paralink they can turn out the lights in St Brieux !!Last edited by farmaholic; Jun 23, 2020, 23:27.
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Originally posted by jazz View PostWell I guess placing canola at 1/4 inch is the next trend, because you cant get more than a couple tenths of rain for a 6 weeks. Gotta start it with the morning dew.
Might as well just use the harrows.
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As I have discovered in the past two yrs, these varieties and with the coating cannot start without sitting in wet soil from a actual rain. Winter soil moisture wont do it, or wont do it evenly, unless you are going to seed Apr 25. By the time it is warm enough to seed, you have lost half of that winter moisture.
And even the guys with the best drills are finding that out. Lugging around another couple thousand pounds of iron isnt going to change that.
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Originally posted by jazz View PostAs I have discovered in the past two yrs, these varieties and with the coating cannot start without sitting in wet soil from a actual rain. Winter soil moisture wont do it, or wont do it evenly, unless you are going to seed Apr 25. By the time it is warm enough to seed, you have lost half of that winter moisture.
And even the guys with the best drills are finding that out. Lugging around another couple thousand pounds of iron isnt going to change that.
No but why? Bare seed would be a good trial.
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Originally posted by bucket View PostAnother good comment....every year I go in to the retailer on the fall and ask if I can buy a canola variety without the treatment on it...I say judging by bare mustard seed the canola would do better coming out of the ground and most are spraying for flea beetles anyway..
No but why? Bare seed would be a good trial.
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We were a little short of both drill power and money this Spring, and as much as I hated to we bought a cheap borgault cultivator and a 6450 tank. I had drank the PHD koolaid long ago and was sure we wouldn’t have as nice of crops on the fields we seeded with the cultivator. Well here we are in late June our crops are in general nice (we are Yorkton area) and I can’t tell the difference between which drill seeded which field. Years of flooding, ruts, difficult trash management, flea beetle pressure because seed treatments don’t work, and it turns out that having a half inch of variance in your seeding depth isn’t the factor that is yield limiting. Especially when eliminating that little variance is a half million (or more).
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We have been trying to seed canola into wheat stubble for the extra winter moisture and some protection against winds and beatles.
Now my dad tells me the tiny rains cant get through the straw and we should start seeding on last yrs lentil fields which were dry as a bone in the top inch.
F who knows anymore.
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Originally posted by Grahamp View PostWe were a little short of both drill power and money this Spring, and as much as I hated to we bought a cheap borgault cultivator and a 6450 tank. I had drank the PHD koolaid long ago and was sure we wouldn’t have as nice of crops on the fields we seeded with the cultivator. Well here we are in late June our crops are in general nice (we are Yorkton area) and I can’t tell the difference between which drill seeded which field. Years of flooding, ruts, difficult trash management, flea beetle pressure because seed treatments don’t work, and it turns out that having a half inch of variance in your seeding depth isn’t the factor that is yield limiting. Especially when eliminating that little variance is a half million (or more).
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