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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag and No-till Machinery
Claydon drill
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<blockquote data-quote="Secret Agronomist" data-source="post: 7657520" data-attributes="member: 153120"><p>Would a Claydon drill work in a ploughed situation? Specifically a trailed one with the front press tyres.</p><p>Looks like a good solution, this would give me the option of dd cover crops into stubble. Bit of dd into covers if I can get that to work etc etc.</p><p>I also want to put fert down so the twin tine option looks like a good one.</p><p>This is in a rotation with lots of potatoes and carrots (about 30% of the rotation). wheat, spring barley and combinable rye. I probably need to plough for the rye to try and reduce ergot problems as sometimes there are two ryes in a row. But we are drilling about 500 acres of covers a year for spring crops so looks like a bit of a no brainer.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Secret Agronomist, post: 7657520, member: 153120"] Would a Claydon drill work in a ploughed situation? Specifically a trailed one with the front press tyres. Looks like a good solution, this would give me the option of dd cover crops into stubble. Bit of dd into covers if I can get that to work etc etc. I also want to put fert down so the twin tine option looks like a good one. This is in a rotation with lots of potatoes and carrots (about 30% of the rotation). wheat, spring barley and combinable rye. I probably need to plough for the rye to try and reduce ergot problems as sometimes there are two ryes in a row. But we are drilling about 500 acres of covers a year for spring crops so looks like a bit of a no brainer. [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag and No-till Machinery
Claydon drill
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