Louis Mc
Member
- Location
- Meath, Ireland
Oh yeah, wondered where I'd got such a good idea
@Louis Mc you even liked it on Sunday
Oh yeah, wondered where I'd got such a good idea
@Louis Mc you even liked it on Sunday
No he's not, hes overloaded the system with carbon starting off, chopping straw off a 10 ton a hectare crop of barley then wheat then osr. He needs a legume, all that straw and biology soaking up nitrogen. The crop gets whats leftover.So are you going to plough it or not then?
Paraquat wasn't as good as glyphosate either
Bydv is a symptom that you have inadequate beneficial insects living in your fields
Yes but not detrimental levelsBydv occurs in all sorts of natural habitats with plenty of wildlife / insect diversity
Until it entirely f**ks a crop up!Yes but not detrimental levels
How often does that happen in reality?Until it entirely fudges a crop up!
Last year a lot.How often does that happen in reality?
How often was that?Last year a lot.
I am so glad gramoxone has gone.
It was quite handy
Yes but not detrimental levels
Looks like the same debate is going on down under
My neighbor has one called "Hungry hill" .I heard of a farmer struggling with a poor field only to find out it used to be called "poverty field"
2 conclusions.Was there a conclusion to this thread?
and there may be some instances where tillage is necessary to resolve a specific problem in a field