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Arable Farming
Cropping
S barley
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<blockquote data-quote="Chae1" data-source="post: 6935892" data-attributes="member: 2681"><p>You have been extremely lucky in my opinion. I seem to end up applying it every year. Apart from 2018 when it was so dry. </p><p></p><p>I'm only going for mid 90s unitwise for low N malting and still get problems. </p><p></p><p>We always seem to get thundery showers in July, which batters it down. I'd be quite happy if only small parts of fields went down, normally end up with acres flat.</p><p></p><p>Its probably muck mineralising and becoming available later in the season. I do count muck applied as ten units of total N though.</p><p></p><p>Probably over cautious now, I have the agronomist well warned it's got to stay standing as I don't want crap from combine driver, and square baler doesn't like wet lumps of straw from combine backing up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Chae1, post: 6935892, member: 2681"] You have been extremely lucky in my opinion. I seem to end up applying it every year. Apart from 2018 when it was so dry. I'm only going for mid 90s unitwise for low N malting and still get problems. We always seem to get thundery showers in July, which batters it down. I'd be quite happy if only small parts of fields went down, normally end up with acres flat. Its probably muck mineralising and becoming available later in the season. I do count muck applied as ten units of total N though. Probably over cautious now, I have the agronomist well warned it's got to stay standing as I don't want crap from combine driver, and square baler doesn't like wet lumps of straw from combine backing up. [/QUOTE]
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Arable Farming
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S barley
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