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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Fodder beet
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<blockquote data-quote="Devil's advocate" data-source="post: 7551558" data-attributes="member: 1504"><p>Yes same here, can never understand why, it might take years to get rid of the problems caused. Wheras one year in five is so sustainable.</p><p></p><p>To yet the real benifits though totally virgin land, the beet grows with such vigour. Local farmer bought a farm with a beet quota but the land was totally beet sick. So he grew the beet on his home farm 20 miles away from the nearesr sugar beet & on heavy grade three soil he had the highest yeilding crop of sugar beet in Yorkshire. Locally (this was 25 years ago) we all went to look at this foreign crop, now fodder beet is much more common.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Devil's advocate, post: 7551558, member: 1504"] Yes same here, can never understand why, it might take years to get rid of the problems caused. Wheras one year in five is so sustainable. To yet the real benifits though totally virgin land, the beet grows with such vigour. Local farmer bought a farm with a beet quota but the land was totally beet sick. So he grew the beet on his home farm 20 miles away from the nearesr sugar beet & on heavy grade three soil he had the highest yeilding crop of sugar beet in Yorkshire. Locally (this was 25 years ago) we all went to look at this foreign crop, now fodder beet is much more common. [/QUOTE]
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