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Farm Business
Tenant Farming, Subsidies, BPS & Legal Issues
sw6 winter cover crops
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<blockquote data-quote="yellow belly" data-source="post: 6887697" data-attributes="member: 305"><p>If you are in an nvz and grow spring crops after a wheat crop then leaching is likely </p><p>eitherdown the drains or through the free draining soil </p><p></p><p>in 2018 /19this was evident by the size of the cover before drain flow in February</p><p>in 2019 20 the cover grew in January dueto the warm weather </p><p></p><p>if I was now applying I would use more overwinter cover and no overwinter stubbles</p><p>overwinter stubble after cereals is not environmentley sustainable </p><p>with a cover the n is scavenged and available to a future crop and has to be better </p><p>in the past an early planted crop captured this n </p><p>this was practiced in the 19 century when nitrogen in the soil was valued and hard to replace </p><p>i</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yellow belly, post: 6887697, member: 305"] If you are in an nvz and grow spring crops after a wheat crop then leaching is likely eitherdown the drains or through the free draining soil in 2018 /19this was evident by the size of the cover before drain flow in February in 2019 20 the cover grew in January dueto the warm weather if I was now applying I would use more overwinter cover and no overwinter stubbles overwinter stubble after cereals is not environmentley sustainable with a cover the n is scavenged and available to a future crop and has to be better in the past an early planted crop captured this n this was practiced in the 19 century when nitrogen in the soil was valued and hard to replace i [/QUOTE]
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sw6 winter cover crops
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