But grandads used it since 19 blah di di blah.The people buying AN at this price know that you are also allowed to use Urea, right?
I know the sort!!!! We've always used blue bag, it's the best, all of the other stuff won't spread ect and as for urea you'll spread it and it'll all have evaporated by the next morning.But grandads used it since 19 blah di di blah.
But only because the government have waived the requirement to use inhibited urea for 12 months.The people buying AN at this price know that you are also allowed to use Urea, right?
Grown beet since 1930.I know the sort!!!! We've always used blue bag, it's the best, all of the other stuff won't spread ect and as for urea you'll spread it and it'll all have evaporated by the next morning.
Who cares? Who's going to actually know what date you applied it. Will they be going round checking fert hoppers after cut off date.The people buying AN at this price know that you are also allowed to use Urea, right?
To a degree yes, but the key is little in the way of costs, no Finance, no Labour, no stewardship costs, and houses to let bought instead of tractors over the last few years. There was going to be 150 acres of spring cereals this year until the price of N ruled it out.A man or woman who speaks like that is very brave or owns their own ground and can live on subsidiary?
And no rent I’d assume tooTo a degree yes, but the key is little in the way of costs, no Finance, no Labour, no stewardship costs, and houses to let bought instead of tractors over the last few years. There was going to be 150 acres of spring cereals this year until the price of N ruled it out.
Steady you on @teslacoil. The first bit about growing beet since the 30s is a littlr close to the bone...........non of us have ever gone to Harper though!!!!!!!!!Grown beet since 1930.
Kids godparents are the fieldsman and nitram rep.
Same folk. Perhaps still live in the same house with their brother. Kids have a 50/50 chance of being chinless mouthbreathers or "popular at Harper" (read: Handled more cock than Colonel Sanders).
And always stack their blue bags where folk driving by can see it. What my son's would call a "weird flex".
Did you plant a cover crop on it instead?To a degree yes, but the key is little in the way of costs, no Finance, no Labour, no stewardship costs, and houses to let bought instead of tractors over the last few years. There was going to be 150 acres of spring cereals this year until the price of N ruled it out.
No Way!... that costs... did nothing, though its just had roundup.Did you plant a cover crop on it instead?
Some is, but all below BPS level.And no rent I’d assume too
You may as well have planted it then if you wentNo Way!... that costs... did nothing, though its just had roundup.
£4 here .You may as well have planted it then if you went
to the trouble of glyphosphating it at £8 a litre.
Cost to replace not what you bought in 1989!£4 here .
It was £400 a drum in the 80'sCost to replace not what you bought in 1989!
Dam Bob you got me on that one.It was £400 a drum in the 80's
Never play a player .Dam Bob you got me on that one.