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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag Crops & Agronomy
No-Till Potatoes
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<blockquote data-quote="David_A" data-source="post: 1188166" data-attributes="member: 4767"><p>Thinking about this from the harvesting point of view, you would likely need to de-stone and make the beds in the previous season, then plant the cover onto the prepared soil in order that it has enough time to bulk (thinking from a Scottish point of view where our previous harvest is later, although if the previous crop was an earlier harvested winter barley we may not loose out on a season of production). This might enable a harvester to work. However, this does rather undo the good that the no till is trying to achieve. It may be a useful stepping stone though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="David_A, post: 1188166, member: 4767"] Thinking about this from the harvesting point of view, you would likely need to de-stone and make the beds in the previous season, then plant the cover onto the prepared soil in order that it has enough time to bulk (thinking from a Scottish point of view where our previous harvest is later, although if the previous crop was an earlier harvested winter barley we may not loose out on a season of production). This might enable a harvester to work. However, this does rather undo the good that the no till is trying to achieve. It may be a useful stepping stone though. [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag Crops & Agronomy
No-Till Potatoes
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