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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag Crops & Agronomy
The Elaine Ingham Challenge
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<blockquote data-quote="Simon C" data-source="post: 845854" data-attributes="member: 319"><p>Well done [USER=933]@Richard III[/USER], you have identified an obvious problem there with ryegrass and there will be other things appearing too. No-till does offer the wheat an advantage though, put the seed into moist soil while conditions are still dry on top and leave the ryegrass seed to take it's chance laying around in the dry. Another reason to drill earlier to get the wheat ahead and out competing the later emerging grasses. Trouble is modern wheat varieties have no allelopathic defense against other plants so it is back to older varieties, or at least some of their genetics, or oats, triticale, or barley.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Simon C, post: 845854, member: 319"] Well done [USER=933]@Richard III[/USER], you have identified an obvious problem there with ryegrass and there will be other things appearing too. No-till does offer the wheat an advantage though, put the seed into moist soil while conditions are still dry on top and leave the ryegrass seed to take it's chance laying around in the dry. Another reason to drill earlier to get the wheat ahead and out competing the later emerging grasses. Trouble is modern wheat varieties have no allelopathic defense against other plants so it is back to older varieties, or at least some of their genetics, or oats, triticale, or barley. [/QUOTE]
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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Regen Ag Crops & Agronomy
The Elaine Ingham Challenge
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