Muck and Blackgrass

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
I have been offered a lot of free FYM - I want it but I am nervous as the straw is not mine and might come from farms with blackgrass issues

My question is if I compost the FYM will it destroy the BG seed that might be in it ? I wouldn't care if I piled it up and left it years before spreading if needed ?
 
I wouldn't touch it with a barge pole I'll PM my postcode and you can dispose of it at my farm for a very small fee. ;)

Actually if you can store it and ideally turn it every 3 months I think you could safely spread it next year. I've been told the key to composting FYM is regular turning to get the temperature up.
 

debe

Member
Location
Wilts
Blackgrass to the line where we spread muck. Turned it regularly but the composition of the much was wrong to get the heat up (too much slurry). Stay away Clive!!
 

franklin

New Member
Someone elses muck with potential BG? Not worth it even if free - it would be better sent to an AD plant at high temps then pasteurised.
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
so is straw from BG areas of the UK now worthless ?


or put another way is BG free straw worth a premium ?

should crops that straw is to be sold from be subject to inspection like a seed crop to slow down the spread of this weed ??
 

E_B

Member
Location
Norfolk
We spread muck originating from heavy land with BG onto clean light land, and haven't seen a problem. Been doing it for nearly two decades. Relax! Having said that, we won't complain if straw prices fall.
 

S J H

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Bedfordshire
so is straw from BG areas of the UK now worthless ?


or put another way is BG free straw worth a premium ?

should crops that straw is to be sold from be subject to inspection like a seed crop to slow down the spread of this weed ??

If only, I'd have plenty of free straw. :whistle:
 

milkloss

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
East Sussex
I wouldn't touch it with a barge pole I'll PM my postcode and you can dispose of it at my farm for a very small fee. ;)

Actually if you can store it and ideally turn it every 3 months I think you could safely spread it next year. I've been told the key to composting FYM is regular turning to get the temperature up.

Doesn't do much to dock seed so I should think BG seed would laugh at the challenge!
 

Will7

Member
so is straw from BG areas of the UK now worthless ?


or put another way is BG free straw worth a premium ?

should crops that straw is to be sold from be subject to inspection like a seed crop to slow down the spread of this weed ??
Would you buy cattle riddled with TB and introduce them to a TB free herd??

Like I said IMHO it is not worth the risk and that opinion is based on my farm having been rammed full of bg and still having plenty! I was offered duck litter but I can't take it because I know where the straw has come from despite my land crying out for organic manure.
 

texelburger

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Herefordshire
We let some fields on a outlying farm for Maize,the farmer spread his own fym from bought in straw.That farm now has some bg on those fields.If you don't know the origin of the fym, as regards bg fields,i would steer well clear.
 

Oat

Member
Location
Cheshire
so is straw from BG areas of the UK now worthless ?


or put another way is BG free straw worth a premium ?

should crops that straw is to be sold from be subject to inspection like a seed crop to slow down the spread of this weed ??
It could be quite difficult to guarantee that a field is completely blackgrass free, as it would have to be inspected early June when blackgrass heads are normally above the crop and easy to see, but even after this you could still get some plants remaining below the canopy and it would be difficult to see any plants at harvest as all would look dead. Since there can be so many sources of blackgrass- seed, machinery, muck etc...., it could be very difficult to prove (or where not) any new plants have come from.

Maybe if you have a very tight almost closed system which offers control over most sources of new blackgrass seed, and you are able to apply 'potentially' infested muck and then haver sufficient time to use several cultivation/chemical/etc... methods to control any possible germination, then maybe you can reduce the risk. It would probably best not to incorporate the muck for as long as possible, as this would potentially mix seed throughout the profile. Maybe just leave it on the surface to rot down and allow chemicals to act on anything that germinated.
 

Brisel

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Midlands
I have been offered a lot of free FYM - I want it but I am nervous as the straw is not mine and might come from farms with blackgrass issues

My question is if I compost the FYM will it destroy the BG seed that might be in it? I wouldn't care if I piled it up and left it years before spreading if needed ?

You'd have to turn the heap occasionally or the ouside won't get hot enough to pasteurise it & kill the seeds. Simon C is quite a whizz with his home made compost - he had some threads running on it in the DD sections.
 

B'o'B

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Rutland
Steven Moss of Rothamsted could not understand why he kept getting asked to go to Wales to give talks on resistant Blackgrass.
It turned out it was because of all the straw bought in from the East they had imported BG which was becoming a problem.
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
You'd have to turn the heap occasionally or the ouside won't get hot enough to pasteurise it & kill the seeds. Simon C is quite a whizz with his home made compost - he had some threads running on it in the DD sections.

i was thinking it might be worth getting a windrowing machine to do it - its a LOT of free OM to walk away from that would make a big difference to my soils over a few years and might not have BG seed but that's an unknown
 

Tractor Boy

Member
Location
Suffolk
I don't think blackgrass will be an issue if you are spreading the muck onto light enough land. We have a heavy land farm with blackgrass and a light land farm. The machinery is all shared and in 20 plus years I haven't seen a blackgrass plant on the light land.

I suppose the question is how light is your light land!
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
I don't think blackgrass will be an issue if you are spreading the muck onto light enough land. We have a heavy land farm with blackgrass and a light land farm. The machinery is all shared and in 20 plus years I haven't seen a blackgrass plant on the light land.

I suppose the question is how light is your light land!

its light ! but not all of it - i would call some more medium loam but certainly nothing heavy

I'm told that the biggest reason BG is not a big issue in my are (it does exist however) is high iron content soils - not sure if that is correct however
 

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