Very exciting! I am a rice researcher from China, we plant rice in such a different way. Thanks for your video so that I can experience the process of rice planting in the United States so intuitively.
Growing up in Placer County as a kid I knew it was summer every time I would see or hear a rice crop plane flying! I make my home in Tennessee these days!
Hi warm greetings. Hope you're doing great over there?.. if don't mind.I have investment proposition you could play in and make fixed income on a daliy/weekly ROI. If you're interested, take mine number we'll talk on whatsapp.
Good to see you were able to get the fields planted. Really enjoyed the inflight footage. Here’s to a great grow season and thanks for another great and informative video.
Fantastic cinematography of the rice falling from the aircraft! Love the slow motion rain of rice seeds in the shot you track the plane right over your head. Beautiful!
Used to have an air tractor like this one decades ago on the Big Island to fertilize sugar cane. Watching them was like your own private air show. Awesome display!
I grew up in the area. Before GPS, flagmen on the berm marked each pass for the pilot. As a kid in the 50s & 60s, I hunted pheasants between Knights Landing and Colusa and walked many cut rice fields with the owners ok. I remember when the farmers first flooded their fields, all the rats that were living in the plowed fields ended up on the roads between the fields. Some years there must have been millions. It was fun for a kid to see the prop planes and their maneuvers after each pass. It seemed like every ag airport had several WWII trainers & others being robbed for parts. Another hazard for pilots must have been the great flocks of birds of all kinds. I don't suppose they burn the rice stubble anymore. If you could stand the smoke, the fire chased out the pheasants on the down wind side.
Thanks for the video, it brought back memories of my 1970s time building flying time and skills working the rice field in Louisiana. Flew an Ag cat with a R980 radial engine. We used roads for landing strips near the fields.
A great fun video to watch, worked in Willows CA contracting for the local Electric Co. surrounded by rice fields, watching those planes seed was breathtaking, flying over the freeway, doing there turns, loops, watching the flaggers, almost running off the road, I can't wait for the next video.....
This answers SO MANY questions about what's going in the fields around my drive up and down the 99 from Sac to Oroville. Thank you!! Would love to see a meetup of the prune or walnut farms!
First saw you on blancolirio. Great job and thank you for all you do to help provide.. Much different than helping my uncle growing cotton. That air planting reminds me of when we finally had aerial spraying. What a time saver that was to help control the pests especially the weevils.
Fantastic video Matt the airborne footage combined with the ground footage of the rice grains hitting the water looked great. Interesting information about presoaking the rice so it falls straight through the water. The GPS must be a helpful thing, when my brother was a teenager he briefly had a job flagging for crop dusters guess they don't need that anymore.
Glad you enjoyed. I quizzed Mr. Williams of Williams Ag Service and he said they haven't needed flaggers since 1992. Pretty interesting. I get a few people who mention that they once flagged or knew someone who flagged for crop-dusters. -M.
That is a quick planting...back in the 1970's, I had some wheat planted by air into soybeans in September but no rain to germinate. Seem like we have been planting forever and just like 2 days here in Texas with our 12 row planter. We planted over a month to get in 620 acres of cotton and 1220 of corn. Hope the fish don't think you are feeding their young.
Why this came recommended in my feed, I don't know, but it sure was fun watching you, Matthew, and all the people working so hard to have a successful rice season!! You have an inspirational and attractive style of talking and communicating. Now you have a new subscriber :))
Wow Matthew you have put together a wonderful video, excellent explanation on everything going on with the farming operation, giving enough information on future videos to keep us looking for the instalment. Thank You for the effort put into producing these videos for us to watch and enjoy. Have a great day.
Thank you for this wonderful message. I'm really happy to hear that you enjoyed learning about the seeding process. I just love the visuals and when good info comes with it--it makes it a fun video to do. Have a great week. -Matthew
Well done! I love to learn how our foods and all the goods we need to maintain our lives are produced, things that are normally hidden by a wall of advertising and marketing.
We raise poverty grass(wheat) here in the Midwest. Just came across this vid and subbed to the channel. Love what you are doing to educate the non Ag sector about farming.
@@Ricefarmingtv South of Vincennes, Indiana. About 50 miles north of the Ohio River. We raise Corn, Wheat, Soybeans & potatoes. We did raise pigs, 200 sows farrow to finish, but the sows left in 2013 and the last group of contract piggies left in March of this year. Here is my Farm channel I share with my sons. They make videos and I make a few. ruclips.net/user/Tractormanpj
@@Grainexpress have even ever entertained the thought of growing popcorn? Im only 30 miles or so from ya , South by southeast and I work for a couple fellas that do popcorn, I enjoy it and the money tends to average out a little better? Just a thought... Hope you have a great growing year bud! (Well if the rain ever stops.....)
Great video again Matt. It was to here when those 2 AG pilots crashed into each other and died. This guys do and awesome job I’m glad you made this video just to show all the things they go threw to seed the rice fields.
This was a great presentation that should be included in educating our children. Absolutely assume editing and photography , How you find the time to do that is probably a whole episode. Loved it Matthew
Great vídeo Matthew! Here in Brazil we do The same. Rice uses a lot of planes. There are around 5 or 6 aerial aplications on our Rice fields. Have a Nice crop season!
What a great channel. Just found it. Thank you for the time and effort you clearly put into your videos. As an ag pilot in the Midwest it's interesting to see the seeding process. (We use a helicopter). Anyway, keep up the good work, and there was me thinking that only fruits and nuts came from CA.
I would say this is much better than the only other modern alternative for seeding rice fields, that being paddy-tractors with tires so thin that it becomes problematic when pulling weight.
Sheepdog, while much of southern California (Los Angeles) is a dessert, we grow rice in the north state where, unless in a drought year, is water rich with reservoirs. We have been farming rice for over 100 years up here. Thanks for the message. -Matthew
I love your show, Matthew! So my question is, how did they plant rice in fields before airplanes? Maybe you could give a historical example of planting rice 3 or 4 hundred years ago? I would image people walking through fields of water with baskets of rice seeds throwing them all over the place ??
Hi Thomas, thank you for the nice message. Mule-drawn seed spreaders! But they have been flying seed for nearly 80 years already. I would love to get into some of the history of farming rice here in CA. Great suggestion! -Matthew
Are you grateful you are not plowing with a water buffalo and planting one rice plant at a time? Which method old way or new produces more pounds of rice per acre?
Not sure what he is flying. Ag Cat maybe? I am partial to the Air Tractor myself especially the 802. He was flying a good seed pattern. Never noticed before but rice seed looks an awful lot like wheat seed. Not sure I envy dipping and diving under those power lines though. Glad he made it safe and sound. Start to a good crop.
Amazing, that when viewing pictures of the baby rice just 3 inches out of the water, you can make out rows. Even though the seed was dropped from 40 feet above the ground, at 120mph, it somehow formed rows
I am a fellow rice farmer in Arkansas the fields we have in this farm are hillsides and full of levees we do our planting with a drill truly like the vid
I like the old D7, looks like an old 3T, pony start converted to electric start. I can’t here it but I know the non-turbo, straight pipe sound as I have one. You can lug them down til you can almost count the firing and it will come back.
Another great video Matthew! I've learned so much about rice farming from your videos. My wife thinks I'm weird that I'm fascinated by all this. Ha Ha!
VERY cool and does Sean also do weddings? :-) At 9:24, the rice appears to have been planted with a planter by the looks of the rows. Thanks for not playing obnoxious music.
Great video I just love how you present them great editing the different angle on the plane amazing keep up The good work i will carry on watching here in england!
Meanwhile in Arkansas, we've had rice planted since the beginning of April and are about to put mid-season fertilize down. But there is also rice that's only been planted for a week or two due to rain.
@@the-troublemaker I have worked in the region years ago. It is the Sacramento Valley. A large flat region of what they call alluvial flat, where all the good soil ends up. The Sacramento river is diverted off on to channels for irrigation all along most of its length. It is a very productive region as it has a great growing climate as well. Almonds, walnuts, rice, tomatoes in their millions of tonnes. Google it.
Another great video Matt. Keep them coming. And by the way, I heard your interview with the Shark Farmer. He seemed like he really didn't know how to handle you. Good job, Farmers Edge will probably be calling you to do some promotions, you did a great job promoting his sponsor. Keep it up brother.
Hey, Thanks John! Glad you listened to the podcast with Rob. That was a fun conversation. I like that he's edgy and I wanted to match that with fun energy, self-deprecation and quips. I had a great time. I appreciate the message and have a great rest of the week. -Matthew
Hi jarhead4life, in my most recent episode I've got a lot of the GoPro footage of the Ag Cat in action with no music so that you can hear the plane's engine and prop. There is also a portion at the end with music too. Here is the link: ruclips.net/video/xTBVms2U98I/видео.html -Matthew
Im a farmer guy from India 🇮🇳..You are really show us a modern and efficient way to cultivate rice...Here in india we use a huge manpower to farm fields......i really wanted to learn your farming methods from you...so i just want to do job in your field...so plz reply
off topic kinda. sometime . in the slack time after planting season can you do a review of the levee system? primarily the damage from the high water event from Oroville 2-3 years ago and what has been done to remedy that. Progress or Setbacks. Just a casual observation. I am not expecting a documentary. The dam is the large shiny nugget and gets the attention but the rest of the system s just as important. Early on I saw houses backed up to the levees with construction equipment on top of the embankment looking down onto roofs. nothing else has been mentioned of the housing . in the Mississippi: Levees have been built which channel the water. Only without a natural flood plain the water is confined to the channel. Silt layers up and raises the water level. High water and levee breaks are very bad news artificially compounded by the helpful actions of humans.
Great video dont know if this question has been asked, im not a farmer but i live in Arizona and always wondered what is the cost for aerial seeding and fumigation? Where i live theres a lot of cotton, alfafa and corn
Matt! If there was no such thing as the air tractor to "fly" seed down to the rice fields...How would rice farmer get seed planted (plan B?) and how long would it take to seed your 1600 acres? Perhaps like in Brazil? (Just a guess on my part) I refer this question you. Cuz you da' MAN with rice farming knowledge.
i'm so amazed with your farming method in the USA,..here in the Philippines,..mostly still done in the traditional way which is planting by hands,,.although during harvest season, we already have some modern equipments and machineries but most farmers can't afford to have one because they are very expensive., so they have to rent harvesting machine and pay them by some part of the crops harvested as rental payment,...too far beyond in comparison of farming in the USA..
Super close indeed, Michael. It's amazing the skill, risk and guts involved in all this. And sometimes there are several planes flying adjacent fields. -M.
Hi Waterman! Well, we do use planes to fly on our pest management applications and mid-season fertilizer. So yeah, I suppose it is like the cranberry bogs. After retreats and including seed we probably have 7 flights over our fields. Could be a few extra with some unforeseen problems. -Matthew
Thank you!
Only 16 likes?
Hat off to all the bush and ag-pilots out there. May the winds forever guide you to a safe return.
Beautifully said! Thank you.
-M.
"Winds Guide you" ?????
Very exciting!
I am a rice researcher from China, we plant rice in such a different way.
Thanks for your video so that I can experience the process of rice planting in the United States so intuitively.
you just need to mechanize your industry
Growing up in Placer County as a kid I knew it was summer every time I would see or hear a rice crop plane flying! I make my home in Tennessee these days!
I love to eat rice, thanks to you and all the other farmers that make that happen. So few people stop to really think about how much work that is.
Hi warm greetings. Hope you're doing great over there?.. if don't mind.I have investment proposition you could play in and make fixed income on a daliy/weekly ROI. If you're interested, take mine number we'll talk on whatsapp.
This video answered every question I asked. Thanks for the in depth explanation about seeding.
Hi David, glad you enjoyed! Thanks for the message.
Sure brings back lots of memories. My uncle flying on the seed and fertilizer onto my grandpa's rice field. That's how I grew up.
Love this episode.. love how airplanes are used to seed the field. Keep up the great work Matt
Glad you enjoyed, Jan! Thank you for the message.
-M,
Thank you Matt, thank you Sean, for this wonderful video! Peace, Love and Happiness to ya'll.
Good to see you were able to get the fields planted. Really enjoyed the inflight footage. Here’s to a great grow season and thanks for another great and informative video.
Thank you very much, Paul!
-Matthew
Fantastic cinematography of the rice falling from the aircraft! Love the slow motion rain of rice seeds in the shot you track the plane right over your head. Beautiful!
Used to have an air tractor like this one decades ago on the Big Island to fertilize sugar cane. Watching them was like your own private air show. Awesome display!
For some reason, it’s extra cool to me that they’re taking off in the midst of the rice fields.
And B roll plane footage would be awesome!
Wannabe Farm isn’t it sooo cool! B roll plane footage coming soon!
-Matthew
@@Ricefarmingtv Forget the rice. I want to see him dumping coconuts. Now that would be some real fun!! Ok, maybe not.
I am always up and down i5, and I love watching these guys flying all over the fields and the freeway.
Awesome video!
I grew up in the area. Before GPS, flagmen on the berm marked each pass for the pilot. As a kid in the 50s & 60s, I hunted pheasants between Knights Landing and Colusa and walked many cut rice fields with the owners ok. I remember when the farmers first flooded their fields, all the rats that were living in the plowed fields ended up on the roads between the fields. Some years there must have been millions. It was fun for a kid to see the prop planes and their maneuvers after each pass. It seemed like every ag airport had several WWII trainers & others being robbed for parts. Another hazard for pilots must have been the great flocks of birds of all kinds. I don't suppose they burn the rice stubble anymore. If you could stand the smoke, the fire chased out the pheasants on the down wind side.
Thanks for the video, it brought back memories of my 1970s time building flying time and skills working the rice field in Louisiana. Flew an Ag cat with a R980 radial engine. We used roads for landing strips near the fields.
A great fun video to watch, worked in Willows CA contracting for the local Electric Co. surrounded by rice fields, watching those planes seed was breathtaking, flying over the freeway, doing there turns, loops, watching the flaggers, almost running off the road, I can't wait for the next video.....
That slo mo of the air tractor dropping seed was beautiful.
Thank you for your California perspective on growing rice. Very different in Texas.
Amazing, everyone living in the city should watch videos like this one to appreciate where his food comes from.
here in Thailand they do it in a different way. very good to make a video of this. GOD Bless you.
Great as always , you really could do 20 episodes about the plane , training , maintenance, costs and other services they provide .
Thank you Martin. It’s true. I need to get a job over there and do several videos!
-M.
This answers SO MANY questions about what's going in the fields around my drive up and down the 99 from Sac to Oroville. Thank you!! Would love to see a meetup of the prune or walnut farms!
Shawn was my instructor when I was learning to fly. Great guy!!
Excellent video once again. This series has been very educational on all the aspects or most of the aspects of what you go through growing rice.
Very exciting! Who would've thunk it! LOL Thanks so much for this great series! Congrats on getting your seed in!
First saw you on blancolirio. Great job and thank you for all you do to help provide.. Much different than helping my uncle growing cotton. That air planting reminds me of when we finally had aerial spraying. What a time saver that was to help control the pests especially the weevils.
I have watched these flyers many times. I admire their skill and precision.
Another, informative and entertaining video, Mattew. I am always happy to see your videos show up in my subscriber feed.
Thank you Mr. Fletcher! That means a lot to me. Always great to hear from you.
-M.
Fantastic video, super cool to learn about how you get your field work done!
Man this brings back so many memories for me as a cane and rice grower in south Florida years ago..
Fantastic video Matt the airborne footage combined with the ground footage of the rice grains hitting the water looked great. Interesting information about presoaking the rice so it falls straight through the water. The GPS must be a helpful thing, when my brother was a teenager he briefly had a job flagging for crop dusters guess they don't need that anymore.
Glad you enjoyed. I quizzed Mr. Williams of Williams Ag Service and he said they haven't needed flaggers since 1992. Pretty interesting. I get a few people who mention that they once flagged or knew someone who flagged for crop-dusters.
-M.
Hey, Matthew. How are you doing? It is nice to see the seed rain above your field again. A year passed so quickly.
That is a quick planting...back in the 1970's, I had some wheat planted by air into soybeans in September but no rain to germinate. Seem like we have been planting forever and just like 2 days here in Texas with our 12 row planter. We planted over a month to get in 620 acres of cotton and 1220 of corn. Hope the fish don't think you are feeding their young.
Why this came recommended in my feed, I don't know, but it sure was fun watching you, Matthew, and all the people working so hard to have a successful rice season!!
You have an inspirational and attractive style of talking and communicating. Now you have a new subscriber :))
Wow Matthew you have put together a wonderful video, excellent explanation on everything going on with the farming operation, giving enough information on future videos to keep us looking for the instalment. Thank You for the effort put into producing these videos for us to watch and enjoy. Have a great day.
Thank you for this wonderful message. I'm really happy to hear that you enjoyed learning about the seeding process. I just love the visuals and when good info comes with it--it makes it a fun video to do. Have a great week.
-Matthew
Another classic episode.
Really love those aerial shots!
Shawn got a badass job! Heres to a good season!
Thank you Mr. Rice Farmer ❤️👍🏻
Curt Weatherbee totally my pleasure. Thanks for the message.
-Matthew
Well done! I love to learn how our foods and all the goods we need to maintain our lives are produced, things that are normally hidden by a wall of advertising and marketing.
Another great video Matt thanks for sharing as usual. Happy farming.
Great to see how uniformly a flown on seed application originates from the plane to the ponds Matthew! Happy Rice Growing 2019. -Bob...
We raise poverty grass(wheat) here in the Midwest. Just came across this vid and subbed to the channel. Love what you are doing to educate the non Ag sector about farming.
Thanks for the message and for tuning into the channel. Where exactly in the midwest do you farm?
-Matthew
@@Ricefarmingtv South of Vincennes, Indiana. About 50 miles north of the Ohio River. We raise Corn, Wheat, Soybeans & potatoes. We did raise pigs, 200 sows farrow to finish, but the sows left in 2013 and the last group of contract piggies left in March of this year. Here is my Farm channel I share with my sons. They make videos and I make a few. ruclips.net/user/Tractormanpj
@@Grainexpress have even ever entertained the thought of growing popcorn? Im only 30 miles or so from ya , South by southeast and I work for a couple fellas that do popcorn, I enjoy it and the money tends to average out a little better? Just a thought... Hope you have a great growing year bud! (Well if the rain ever stops.....)
Travis Whitworth we raised some years ago and it just never really worked out. Non GMO beans seem to pay good. 😉
First time a see how you plant rice, that was awesome
Cool Jan! Glad I could provide a good look at how we plant rice. That was fun and your message means a lot! Thank you.
-M.
Great video again Matt. It was to here when those 2 AG pilots crashed into each other and died. This guys do and awesome job I’m glad you made this video just to show all the things they go threw to seed the rice fields.
Amazing new video it’s really interesting to see the difference in rice farming between Louisiana and California
Great video! I love photographing these guys!
This was a great presentation that should be included in educating our children. Absolutely assume editing and photography , How you find the time to do that is probably a whole episode. Loved it Matthew
Great vídeo Matthew! Here in Brazil we do The same. Rice uses a lot of planes. There are around 5 or 6 aerial aplications on our Rice fields. Have a Nice crop season!
That was one of the most fascinating videos you’ve done Matt, big thanks!
What a great channel. Just found it. Thank you for the time and effort you clearly put into your videos. As an ag pilot in the Midwest it's interesting to see the seeding process. (We use a helicopter). Anyway, keep up the good work, and there was me thinking that only fruits and nuts came from CA.
California - seems like a great place for farming with flooded fields of irrigation water
Yep!
I would say this is much better than the only other modern alternative for seeding rice fields, that being paddy-tractors with tires so thin that it becomes problematic when pulling weight.
love it... i could watch the flying part all day.
Jonathan Naylor you’ll really like the upcoming episode then. All goPro footage on the plane! Thanks for the message.
-M.
Your work crew are bad ass you can see the coordination they have.
Growing a crop that requires massive amount of water in what is essentially a desert. Hats off to smart farming.
Sheepdog, while much of southern California (Los Angeles) is a dessert, we grow rice in the north state where, unless in a drought year, is water rich with reservoirs. We have been farming rice for over 100 years up here. Thanks for the message.
-Matthew
I love your show, Matthew! So my question is, how did they plant rice in fields before airplanes? Maybe you could give a historical example of planting rice 3 or 4 hundred years ago? I would image people walking through fields of water with baskets of rice seeds throwing them all over the place ??
Hi Thomas, thank you for the nice message. Mule-drawn seed spreaders! But they have been flying seed for nearly 80 years already. I would love to get into some of the history of farming rice here in CA. Great suggestion!
-Matthew
Superbly explained with very deep analysis report in your speech.
Are you grateful you are not plowing with a water buffalo and planting one rice plant at a time?
Which method old way or new produces more pounds of rice per acre?
Planting by hand is always going to produce more pounds per acres because you can guarantee the field gets planted perfectly.
Wow! That is so interesting, I didn’t realize rice could be planted this way
Not sure what he is flying. Ag Cat maybe? I am partial to the Air Tractor myself especially the 802. He was flying a good seed pattern. Never noticed before but rice seed looks an awful lot like wheat seed. Not sure I envy dipping and diving under those power lines though. Glad he made it safe and sound. Start to a good crop.
Johnny Holland yes those are Ag-Cats.
Amazing, that when viewing pictures of the baby rice just 3 inches out of the water, you can make out rows. Even though the seed was dropped from 40 feet above the ground, at 120mph, it somehow formed rows
Great video. I know exactly where this field is. Very educational. Thank you.
Thanks for your time
I am a fellow rice farmer in Arkansas the fields we have in this farm are hillsides and full of levees we do our planting with a drill truly like the vid
Ice Age Farmer recommended you. Sweet video. Something so rad about ag planes.
Hi Michael, thanks for the message and heads up regarding Ice Age Famers nice recommendation. Glad you enjoyed the episode!
-Matthew
I like the old D7, looks like an old 3T, pony start converted to electric start. I can’t here it but I know the non-turbo, straight pipe sound as I have one. You can lug them down til you can almost count the firing and it will come back.
Another great video Matthew! I've learned so much about rice farming from your videos. My wife thinks I'm weird that I'm fascinated by all this. Ha Ha!
HA! My wife thinks I'm weird for all sorts of reasons. :) But that's okay.
-Matthew
Great video and the info was great too.
VERY cool and does Sean also do weddings? :-)
At 9:24, the rice appears to have been planted with a planter by the looks of the rows.
Thanks for not playing obnoxious music.
NO weddings. WHY you may ask. Because some mental midget would try dropping coconuts instead of rice .
Great video I just love how you present them great editing the different angle on the plane amazing keep up The good work i will carry on watching here in england!
Was that Oroville dam?.. certainly hope you boys are behind that monster.. awesome video 🇺🇸👍 👍 thanks for sharing 🇺🇸🇺🇸
Fun video. Don't know if it's possible, but a 360 wing cam would be cool
Real sky cowboy helping feeding America thanks for sharing
Waldo Ricer! I came to watch the air tractor. I now have to know how rice works.
I wish my father inlaw was still alive. He lived in Gridley and would have loved to see this from the air view
I’m a prepper; I have over a hundred pounds of rice. I got it on clearance for about 10c a pound; my understanding is it keeps indefinitely.
God bless your hardworking bro
Meanwhile in Arkansas, we've had rice planted since the beginning of April and are about to put mid-season fertilize down. But there is also rice that's only been planted for a week or two due to rain.
Amazing shots! Excellent video!!
Hey matt great job on this video.
Too cool. Looking forward to seeing the b-roll
i would have never thought rice would be a crop in CA considering the water needs
My questions - : 1. the plane comes from East Germany? 2. You have enough water in California for rice cultivation?
@@the-troublemaker I have worked in the region years ago. It is the Sacramento Valley. A large flat region of what they call alluvial flat, where all the good soil ends up. The Sacramento river is diverted off on to channels for irrigation all along most of its length. It is a very productive region as it has a great growing climate as well. Almonds, walnuts, rice, tomatoes in their millions of tonnes. Google it.
Another great video Matt. Keep them coming. And by the way, I heard your interview with the Shark Farmer. He seemed like he really didn't know how to handle you. Good job, Farmers Edge will probably be calling you to do some promotions, you did a great job promoting his sponsor. Keep it up brother.
Hey, Thanks John! Glad you listened to the podcast with Rob. That was a fun conversation. I like that he's edgy and I wanted to match that with fun energy, self-deprecation and quips. I had a great time. I appreciate the message and have a great rest of the week.
-Matthew
Ag pilots are like modern day barnstormers!!! It would be cool to hear the planes engine and prop in future vids... no music
Hi jarhead4life, in my most recent episode I've got a lot of the GoPro footage of the Ag Cat in action with no music so that you can hear the plane's engine and prop. There is also a portion at the end with music too. Here is the link:
ruclips.net/video/xTBVms2U98I/видео.html
-Matthew
Here I'm your new subscriber for your hard work Regards from north east India
Hi Robert! Thank you for the message and welcome to the channel. I hope you enjoy.
-Matthew
Im a farmer guy from India 🇮🇳..You are really show us a modern and efficient way to cultivate rice...Here in india we use a huge manpower to farm fields......i really wanted to learn your farming methods from you...so i just want to do job in your field...so plz reply
off topic kinda. sometime . in the slack time after planting season can you do a review of the levee system? primarily the damage from the high water event from Oroville 2-3 years ago and what has been done to remedy that. Progress or Setbacks. Just a casual observation. I am not expecting a documentary. The dam is the large shiny nugget and gets the attention but the rest of the system s just as important. Early on I saw houses backed up to the levees with construction equipment on top of the embankment looking down onto roofs. nothing else has been mentioned of the housing .
in the Mississippi: Levees have been built which channel the water. Only without a natural flood plain the water is confined to the channel. Silt layers up and raises the water level. High water and levee breaks are very bad news artificially compounded by the helpful actions of humans.
What is the difference in prices of aerial seedings and of traditional ground seeding ?
Very interesting 👍👍👍👍
Turbo AG plane is so cool.
Amazing! How was rice seeded prior to airplane seeding?
Transplant, or direct seeding into standing water
BH, airplanes have been used since the 1920s. I’ll need to quiz my Pops how Grand daddy did it.
-M.
Awesome! Always learning! 👍🏻
B H some farms in Australia direct drill rice seed into the paddy’s before the water is added
Great video dont know if this question has been asked, im not a farmer but i live in Arizona and always wondered what is the cost for aerial seeding and fumigation? Where i live theres a lot of cotton, alfafa and corn
Ive got family that farm rice here in Arkansas, I never knew it was that involved
how do you control the seed of weeds that are naturaly already sown at puddy?
Matt! If there was no such thing as the air tractor to "fly" seed down to the rice fields...How would rice farmer get seed planted (plan B?) and how long would it take to seed your 1600 acres? Perhaps like in Brazil? (Just a guess on my part) I refer this question you. Cuz you da' MAN with rice farming knowledge.
i'm so amazed with your farming method in the USA,..here in the Philippines,..mostly still done in the traditional way which is planting by hands,,.although during harvest season, we already have some modern equipments and machineries but most farmers can't afford to have one because they are very expensive., so they have to rent harvesting machine and pay them by some part of the crops harvested as rental payment,...too far beyond in comparison of farming in the USA..
WOW ! Those transmission towers are close!
Super close indeed, Michael. It's amazing the skill, risk and guts involved in all this. And sometimes there are several planes flying adjacent fields.
-M.
Excellent video. Do you spray from the air like we do on cranberry bogs?
Hi Waterman! Well, we do use planes to fly on our pest management applications and mid-season fertilizer. So yeah, I suppose it is like the cranberry bogs. After retreats and including seed we probably have 7 flights over our fields. Could be a few extra with some unforeseen problems.
-Matthew