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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag General Discussion
Have any of the religious direct drillers been ploughing or tilling this time?
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<blockquote data-quote="britt" data-source="post: 6785667" data-attributes="member: 1739"><p>You can't be that far from us, where those that have ploughed and combied that I have spoken to, admit that about half of what has gone in won't make a crop, have incurred costs, will be very slow to dry out to replant in spring and will take a lot of repairing over a number of years starting this autumn.</p><p>With the benefit of hindsight they would have been better off leaving heavy land as stubble.</p><p>Light land was worth planting, but has to carry the cost of the failed crops and soil damage.</p><p>It comes down to knowing your soil and what it can cope with and bit of luck with the following weather.</p><p>There are also many acres which have been ploughed since Christmas which weren't planted and are now really waterlogged and would have been better left as stubble.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="britt, post: 6785667, member: 1739"] You can't be that far from us, where those that have ploughed and combied that I have spoken to, admit that about half of what has gone in won't make a crop, have incurred costs, will be very slow to dry out to replant in spring and will take a lot of repairing over a number of years starting this autumn. With the benefit of hindsight they would have been better off leaving heavy land as stubble. Light land was worth planting, but has to carry the cost of the failed crops and soil damage. It comes down to knowing your soil and what it can cope with and bit of luck with the following weather. There are also many acres which have been ploughed since Christmas which weren't planted and are now really waterlogged and would have been better left as stubble. [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag General Discussion
Have any of the religious direct drillers been ploughing or tilling this time?
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