We grow lots of straw here regularly, often problematic. It has gotten very trendy to bale it off. I would guess 85% of cereals were baled this year and a bit of canola straw. And there is no shortage of feed here, guys are just trying to get their baling back out of it. Seems counterproductive to me. I bale some every year but try to take it from the fields where I can replace with manure.
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Originally posted by TOM4CWB View PostOne good thunderstorm can add 50ib/ac n in crop year.... A good pea crop can add another 100b/ac n the next 3 years... plus soil conditioning / nutrient avaliability/uptake is increased... 60bu/ac pea crop well chopped and spread= huge productivity gains after that pulse crop... fabas not so much...
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Originally posted by helmsdale View Postthe stover number still matters... You have to grow the straw in the current year.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostTrue if this is the first year that the straw was returned to the soil. But if you have been putting the straw back every year for years or decades, at some point the mineralization of previous straw must cancel out the need to fertilize for the stover growth in the current year. If not, then where do the nutrients go?
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Originally posted by TOM4CWB View PostOne good thunderstorm can add 50ib/ac n in crop year.... A good pea crop can add another 100b/ac n the next 3 years... plus soil conditioning / nutrient avaliability/uptake is increased... 60bu/ac pea crop well chopped and spread= huge productivity gains after that pulse crop... fabas not so much...
Supposedly legumes are overrated in what they can supply.
Everyone here bales pea straw. If the N is worth that much, then they are getting a bad deal selling the straw.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostTrue if this is the first year that the straw was returned to the soil. But if you have been putting the straw back every year for years or decades, at some point the mineralization of previous straw must cancel out the need to fertilize for the stover growth in the current year. If not, then where do the nutrients go?
Western Canadian agronomy in general got away from that and just promoted higher and higher fertility which leads to degraded soils and more disease levels in most cases .
From what I’ve seen the past 15 years here , soil amendments to promote healthy bacteria are the link to getting mineralization back and healthy soils to properly break down straw and stover , thus greatly reducing disease levels and dependence on very high fertility to get decent crops . Unfortunately here , we got behind the 8 ball and it will take a while . Listened to too many “expert agronomists†that simply focused on higher fertility and promote costly variable rate, rather than soil health . It was and is all about their retail sales , not the real issues starting from the soil in the first place.
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You have to wonder if less mobile nutrients from the stover accumulate in the surface layers of low til soil? How avalable is your soil analysis “plant avalable†phosphate in a dry surface soil condition?
Fabas are know to chelate phosphates by releasing acidic root exudates that release non avalable nutrients tied up in the soil. You can have a faba crop remove 60lbs of P from the soil and still show higher soil P levels after a year of production with a lessor fertility package.
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Furrow, I like the idea of aerating the soil but not with tillage. Last spring there were a gazillion earthworms when we were checking seeding depth. This fall when we disced a very small patch in the fields we were harvesting to place the tractor and disc on in case of fire, I noticed the lumps and chunks the disc turned up were full of earthworm tunnels. But where did the worms go? Deeper? Get out the track hoe! Lol, oops I forgot
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I know it’s a swear word, but again, f o r a g e.
Pencil out hay values. Forage seed one time cost amortized is ridiculously cheap. Perennials smash the cycle, to the point where they almost let you start over with near virgin soil and a clean slate of soil health.
Best, for that portion of the farm, you eliminate the treadmill from hell.
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