46 was quoted today 1060 take home now.
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Originally posted by jwabBut if it’s not removed how are those nutrients removed? To me they are just in a different form.
I get the moisture use in a year like this I guess. But if it was moisture use ppl were concerned about, would they have not sprayed it far before it got so out of hand?
Lots of guys still spraying the free cover crop, days before frost will do it for free? Yes, perennial weed control, but most fields including ones I drove a cross, have virtually no perennial weeds.
I think it’s just the appeal and the peer pressure to have a field that doesn’t look “messy†or uncared for. So blow another ten or more buck an acre?
Maybe the govt will come through with an ad hoc and cover the cost of spraying out the best thing possible for the soil in many years, in an industry that is sorely lacking a grasp of soil health.
I’m always missing something, but in this case, I’m REALLY missing something I guess?Last edited by Sheepwheat; Oct 8, 2021, 07:42.
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Originally posted by jwabBut if it’s not removed how are those nutrients removed? To me they are just in a different form.
Those areas showed up big time the following spring .
Yes the nutrients aren’t totally gone , but they are not there available for next year from what I seen .
Will depend on breakdown and weather for sure .
The nutrients may not be lost but they certainly were not readily available for the next crop .
Hopefully all that plant material in some fields does break down for guys for next year . Fertilizer is an awfully dig expense for next years crop .
Would be interesting to see some tissue tests from those areas next June compared to areas with minimal regrowth. I may do that in that strip along with a soil test this fall .
May see a difference, may not
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Originally posted by agstar77 View PostAlmost all the btos have sprayed their fields. Why I don't know . Like running their toys across field and supporting chem companies.
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Originally posted by Sheepwheat View PostHere they did it in between draining thirty acre sloughs, pushing the natural windbreaks and drift reducers, and it seems like lots of them would far rather have an eight foot deep trench in the landscape, than a half acre pothole that oh the horror, you have to go around! So now they have a three hundred yard trench to farm around. Looks good from the road I guess?
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Originally posted by agstar77 View PostAlmost all the btos have sprayed their fields. Why I don't know . Like running their toys across field and supporting chem companies.
Some of this growth is almost 2 months old and no real hard frost in the forecast.
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Its a very interesting year.
Lentils on a field in 2020 sprayed with heat and roundup as a preharvest . The field was sprayed with Rup and authority this spring for flax and sprayed preharvest with Rup.
Volunteer lentils that germinated on the surface from last year on the 2021 flax field.
Sort of highlights what good is authority?
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Originally posted by jazz View PostThis was an unusual year. We dont usually do a lot of fall spraying but the regrowth of canola was taking moisture and now volunteer lentils with thistle and round leaf mallow couldnt be ignored anymore.
Some of this growth is almost 2 months old and no real hard frost in the forecast.
Each to their own . Here we had enough moisture at harvest to get a flush
Next spring will tell the tale
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Our wheat fields have only shown wheat growth and soybeans have nothing. With cooling trend weed growth will stop . Spraying mallow with roundup if the seeds have formed is too late. It is a problem here HW has been one of the solutions along with rup in beans. Kochia is bad this year.
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My main thought as I have driven the country post harvest is what a year to have had it all fenced. The lbs of gain on lamb and the post weaning ewe recovery would have been phenomenal.
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