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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag General Discussion
Organic no till
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<blockquote data-quote="New Puritan" data-source="post: 7790178" data-attributes="member: 39018"><p>As well as being interested in the yields, I do have a few general questions... They mentioned using a direct drill to establish the cash crop, how and when is the clover established? What did the trial follow in the rotation - i.e. what was in the that field the year before? They mentioned perennial weeds being a problem - are they worse than in normal organic cereals? They're bad enough already in mine, I don't want more docks/thistles than I already get. I'm just trying to get a picture of the overall rotation that a system like this sits in. I tried undersowing winter wheat with clover a couple of years back and found the clover was too competitive against the wheat, but that may have been down to choice of varieties of both.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="New Puritan, post: 7790178, member: 39018"] As well as being interested in the yields, I do have a few general questions... They mentioned using a direct drill to establish the cash crop, how and when is the clover established? What did the trial follow in the rotation - i.e. what was in the that field the year before? They mentioned perennial weeds being a problem - are they worse than in normal organic cereals? They're bad enough already in mine, I don't want more docks/thistles than I already get. I'm just trying to get a picture of the overall rotation that a system like this sits in. I tried undersowing winter wheat with clover a couple of years back and found the clover was too competitive against the wheat, but that may have been down to choice of varieties of both. [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag General Discussion
Organic no till
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