Wheat yields so far

willy

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Rutland
Well started wheat on Wednesday and so far wheats have been interesting.

started on second wheats on brash, struggled to do 2.5t, then went into first wheat on brash again 2.5-2.75.

then went onto second wheat on brash but after failed osr which had sewage sludge incorporated at drilling last august then osr sprayed off and wheat drilled on one of the frosts in November. This has amazed me and done 3.5 tonnes an acre over 20 ha.

then back onto 1st wheaton v light land but with sewage sludge applied and this is doing a good 3.t.

sofor me sewage sludge is proving its value
 
Wheat yields all over here, headlands generally crap-ok, middles anything from 3.3-3.8 ton/ac so far on first & second wheat zyatt not really noticing much difference between first or second wheat yet? Still got some worse looking stuff to cut & some potentially better looking stuff to cut yet, but generally pleased all things considered! Cheers dh
 

Nitrams

Member
Location
Cornwall
You can put what you like on the land but the biggest yield differentiater in extremes is strength/quality of your land. Workability when wet and ability to retain moisture when dry( subsoil just as important as topsoil for moisture retention) and this year both were required
 

nick...

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
south norfolk
Thanks for your honesty.will make me feel better when I get into my wheat with next to no roots and a flag leaf that dissapeared weeks ago
nick...
 
Well started wheat on Wednesday and so far wheats have been interesting.

started on second wheats on brash, struggled to do 2.5t, then went into first wheat on brash again 2.5-2.75.

then went onto second wheat on brash but after failed osr which had sewage sludge incorporated at drilling last august then osr sprayed off and wheat drilled on one of the frosts in November. This has amazed me and done 3.5 tonnes an acre over 20 ha.

then back onto 1st wheaton v light land but with sewage sludge applied and this is doing a good 3.t.

sofor me sewage sludge is proving its value

Phosphate gives the roots a good nod and keeps the plants going all winter.

Microplastics are a concern but will undoubtedly be banned from going into waste water before long with any luck.
 

Brisel

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Midlands
Trouble is the cost? Here it’s £8/ton @20ton/ha....!!! So you need an extra ton/ha wheat to cover the cost of the sludge? Agreed it’s good - but....!! Cheers dh

Usually worth £10/t in N and P with the bonus of trace elements and organic matter. 20 t/ha gives around 3 crops worth of P (circa 220 kg/ha P2O5)
 

Brisel

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Midlands
How much micro plastic in it? Next big issue for industry.

What is your view on this issue? My concern is what the plastic breaks down into. Still a yield lift on chalk after a dose and no reduction in earthworm numbers.

Having said that, the 3 osr fields treated with sewage cake last autumn were lost to flea beetle 🙁
 

bankrupt

Member
Location
EX17/20
the 3 osr fields treated with sewage cake last autumn were lost to flea beetle 🙁
Having spent many happy days the last ten or twelve autumns ploughing in the sewage cake, Brisel, I can confirm that it's extraordinary attractive to anything at all that can fly, particularly just after dawn.

:joyful: :joyful:
 

Will you help clear snow?

  • yes

    Votes: 99 33.2%
  • no

    Votes: 199 66.8%

The London Palladium event “BPR Seminar”

  • 47,027
  • 692
This is our next step following the London rally 🚜

BPR is not just a farming issue, it affects ALL business, it removes incentive to invest for growth

Join us @LondonPalladium on the 16th for beginning of UK business fight back👍

Back
Top