A significant result

Harvested the second of our no till, wide row wheats last night. I was disappointed with the yield as it's our "best" field. We got 11.7t/ha compared to 12t on the "second best".

However, there were many variables between the two, drilling date different by almost a month, different variety, fields not adjacent (although quite close), different cropping history etc etc.

Glad I had the slightly more scientific test as reported in OP, otherwise I would be worrying about the row spacing. As it is, I'm now thinking about whether we are drilling too early. What is is NIAB TAG say is optimum, October 7th?

I don't think your row spacing is an issue. Equally you can't expect to get drilling date optimum each year, just a spread of dates seems prudent
 
Location
Cheshire
Harvested the second of our no till, wide row wheats last night. I was disappointed with the yield as it's our "best" field. We got 11.7t/ha compared to 12t on the "second best".

However, there were many variables between the two, drilling date different by almost a month, different variety, fields not adjacent (although quite close), different cropping history etc etc.

Glad I had the slightly more scientific test as reported in OP, otherwise I would be worrying about the row spacing. As it is, I'm now thinking about whether we are drilling too early. What is is NIAB TAG say is optimum, October 7th?

It is good to be open minded and have time to digest yield results, but to spend a nano second trying to reconcile a 2% yield difference.
 

The Ruminant

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Hertfordshire
@dontknowanything Apologies if you've already mentioned this but how did the very early-drilled wheat grazed by sheep compare to the other wheats?

When we saw it during a farm walk last autumn it didn't look much further ahead above-ground than the later drilled stuff (due to a cold August and September post-drilling if I remember correctly). However, when we dug up a few plants I remember seeing a much better root structure on the early drilled stuff.

Did this have any affect on yields? Also, did the sheep grazing add anything to the overall gross margin of the field compared to the rest?

And the acid test - would you repeat the exercise?
 
Location
Cambridge
@dontknowanything Apologies if you've already mentioned this but how did the very early-drilled wheat grazed by sheep compare to the other wheats?

When we saw it during a farm walk last autumn it didn't look much further ahead above-ground than the later drilled stuff (due to a cold August and September post-drilling if I remember correctly). However, when we dug up a few plants I remember seeing a much better root structure on the early drilled stuff.

Did this have any affect on yields? Also, did the sheep grazing add anything to the overall gross margin of the field compared to the rest?

And the acid test - would you repeat the exercise?
I'd love to tell you, but you've convinced me not to share good ideas with competitors!
 

SFI - What % were you taking out of production?

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Expanded and improved Sustainable Farming Incentive offer for farmers published

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Expanded Sustainable Farming Incentive offer from July will give the sector a clear path forward and boost farm business resilience.

From: Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs and The Rt Hon Sir Mark Spencer MP Published21 May 2024

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Full details of the expanded and improved Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) offer available to farmers from July have been published by the...
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