michael N123
Member
But she could of tested a handfull before going in with the combineThe farmer was growing Soya for the first time, so yes, perhaps not that easy to tell?
But she could of tested a handfull before going in with the combineThe farmer was growing Soya for the first time, so yes, perhaps not that easy to tell?
The farmer was growing Soya for the first time, so yes, perhaps not that easy to tell?
But she could of tested a handfull before going in with the combine
Not very exciting TV rubbing a handful of beans out to test the moisture. Was all set up for the TV.
In all fairness this is probably the truth. I could see from the picture of the crop that it wasn’t quite there yet. Don’t forget it was filmed about a month ago.
PS Soya has a very high oil content so you would have to compensate for the moisture reading on most moisture meters and it would look wet even when it’s dry ( like crushed OSR ).
@Simon Chiles what are you managing to get your soya to yield now?
Grew it once in Cornwall when Robin Appel first pushed it and Edward Willmott was the leading light. Only managed about 10cwt/acre so gave it up as a bad job.
Guess David has picked up the pieces to add to what he did with Lupins.
Credit where credits due and that is that Robin Appel had some smart guys working for him in the late '80's and early '90's
not Kate Moss then