• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Controlled Traffic or Mid-Row Seeding

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Controlled Traffic or Mid-Row Seeding

    CTF seems to be the new buzz-word, I am
    wondering if any gains are more from the
    mid-row seeding than reduced compaction.
    Does anyone here use mid-row seeding?
    Smart-hitch etc. Have you seen yield
    gains?
    I can understand gains in dry/windy
    areas but in higher rainfall areas (15"
    plus on average, not the wreck of a year
    we all just suffered through) would
    there be a benefit from mid-row seeding
    or is direct seeding just as good?
    Frost cycles should break up most
    compaction and I think that with soils
    saturated at freeze up they should
    fracture more than dry soils would have
    (trying to find a silver lining in the
    rainfall of 2010).

    With the cost of guidance coming down as
    the accuracy goes up mid-row seeding
    should become commonplace.
    CTF looks like a pain in the ass to
    modify equipment and try to match up
    header size to seeding/spraying
    equipment and what if you have a
    breakdown and need to rent a machine in
    the busy season? It looks quite
    limiting and I need to see results
    before I commit.

    #2
    Ron
    Wanted to make a few comments as I have a little
    experience with inter row seeding and was
    fortunate to see CTF systems in Australia.
    First inter row seeding is a component of CTF and
    one that provides an incremental gain. Our
    experience with inter row ( we farm near you) is that
    we are seeing both better seed placement and
    ability to do a better job in heavy residue
    conditions. We can handle taller residue( canola)
    which in past meant extra trips over field with
    heavy harrow as well as retain more standing
    stubble for winter wheat. It's also been suggested
    that inter row reduces disease pressure from things
    such as take all.
    In regards to CTF our experience in Australia it
    would indicate that we need to better understand
    or define what we mean when we talk about
    compaction. CTF is an effort to improve our soil
    above that we would class is the norm. Frost cycles
    may counter some of the damage we do with heavy
    equipment in wet conditions but does little to make
    the soil better. By not driving on areas where we
    grow crops we accomplish a couple of things. First
    we improve water infiltration and we saw
    impressive examples of major rainfall events
    quickly soaking into the ground. The second thing
    we saw was a better soil environment also
    improved soil biological activity. This improves
    porosity at deeper depths. This builds an
    environment with more soil moisture holding
    capacity, better nutrient cycling, and an improved
    ability of the plant roots to access both moisture
    and nutrients.
    You made the comment that the system looks like a
    pain in the ass to implement but interestingly we
    were told time and time again that once you had
    the system up and running it is much easier to
    operate than what we currently do . We were also
    told that there will be times you will have to make
    compromises due to difficult situations. In those
    situations your gains will be less and often you will
    visually see that the following year.
    Efforts our happening to test CTF in our conditions
    to help assist producers in making decisions on
    whether they want to implement CTF on their
    farms. I would suggest the best current strategy for
    their farms is to start thinking about sizing
    purchases of machinery so that it will fit into a CTF
    system. If CTF looks promising then you will
    already have some pieces of the system in place. If
    you work on 2 to 1 or 3 to 1 sizing you will be able
    to make things work.

    Comment


      #3
      I would suggest you begin inter-row
      seeding first and worry about CTF
      later. Once you get inter-row seeding
      down, CTF is a natural progression
      should you chose that path. I know two
      guys who inter row seed and both claim
      a reduction in plugging and faster
      seeding speeds because the stubble on
      either side reduces soil throw on to
      the front rows. There's a lot of
      intuitive reasons why inter-row seeding
      will work but no research data. If
      you're running Omnistar or Starfire
      GPS, try a field next year and start
      doing comparisons.

      You could probably name a 1000 reasons
      why CTF wouldn't work. Just sit back
      and watch the results as more research
      and farm experience becomes public. We
      run a 30 ft CTF system and it doesn't
      get any easier. No overlap or underlap
      during seeding, spraying or harvest.
      Big efficiency gains for us and no
      wheel tracks slowing maturity down. We
      straight cut everything while everyone
      swathed in our area this year.

      Gotta run. Good luck.
      Steve

      Comment

      • Reply to this Thread
      • Return to Topic List
      Working...