Syngenta came out to the field

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 29 июн 2024
  • the meeting went well. I think we figured out the issues and I have already begun to remedy them. I will also be applying some fertilizer to my beans if this weather keeps up the way its going. deer will be the issue I cant control like I would like to.
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 84

  • @NicoleJohnson-si1fh
    @NicoleJohnson-si1fh 16 дней назад +28

    Appreciate the realness in your content, it's like a dose of authenticity

  • @garycampbell7511
    @garycampbell7511 16 дней назад +13

    Get the moldboard plow out.

    • @11T872
      @11T872 16 дней назад

      Ripstriping

  • @kencannabisgrows7988
    @kencannabisgrows7988 16 дней назад +4

    its all a learning process keep up the awesome work cheers

  • @lloydreeves715
    @lloydreeves715 16 дней назад +3

    Keep up with the good work love watching you on RUclips god bless

  • @TomRiddle-ww5on
    @TomRiddle-ww5on 16 дней назад +6

    Deer have ruined the beans in my well fenced in garden this year. This fall I will act accordingly

  • @alanb9337
    @alanb9337 16 дней назад +2

    The 'Prescription Tillage Technology' (Iowa) discs/ openers - (serrated STPS for rock soils)on the John Deere planters/ seeders might be worth a try next season. The STP discs were developed due to slow corn emergence in wet Iowa spring conditions. Claims - to have less seed trench sidewall compaction, less hair pinning for no till, U shaped seed trench to allow the Keeton seed firmer to press the seed to the bottom of the seed trench etc. Aussies always trying different things, e.g steel rod in a ring for planter gauge wheels. "RYAN NT Gauge Wheels on Double Disc Planters, including John Deere and Kinze"

  • @scotbenson8097
    @scotbenson8097 4 дня назад

    The variability of corn development is caused by variance of soil temperature at planting. If the insulating residue is not cleared over the top of the seed site, and remain clear, the problem will continue. Not likely to be the chemistry or nutrient deficiency you mentioned. Very few no-till operators execute cleaning function fully.
    You are right about the previous rains received and the profile collapse they left. No tillage will cure it.

  • @user-wh2lp8mc6d
    @user-wh2lp8mc6d 16 дней назад +2

    When vertical tillage first came out everyone in my area bought one and was the only thing we used. Well fast forward 15 years and we’ve found out it created a hard pan much like the moldboard plow did just not as deep. There a great tool but most people here have gone to a rotation of ripping or some sort of chisel plowing on certain fields every few years. We’re also on heavy red clay. Maybe not your problem but might be something to look into.

  • @TheGrumpyFarmer
    @TheGrumpyFarmer 16 дней назад +2

    Heavy residue keeps ground cooler early season so the roots aren’t deep enough to get to the N yet. Just my thoughts

  • @jvin248
    @jvin248 16 дней назад +1

    6:00 I like your theory on the "too cold for the corn". Residue shades the ground retaining moisture; which is a huge benefit later in the dry hot summer where you may measure 70deg shaded soil vs 120deg bare cooking dirt in July torching the corn. This year has been a cooler spring but just wait it will be super hot again and need that cover. .. Chemistry courses taught that for every 10deg rise in temperature you get twice the reaction rate; which carried over into practical bread making and home brewing that reveals a similar activity with yeast (which are plants). Keep it in the right range and the conversion is fast while colder definitely slows it down. .. You're on the right idea path with corn leaf temperature, I've seen the same thing in my system which has a whole lot more cover than you have here (I'm planting into standing rye, then knock it flat after corn emerges).

  • @jankotze1959
    @jankotze1959 16 дней назад +1

    Great stuff, just growing pains they go through certain conditions but they will yield good

  • @user-df3jd2oj7x
    @user-df3jd2oj7x 16 дней назад +1

    Hi, one lonely farmer. I'm not a farmer, but I remember back in the seventies, all framers ploughed their land, and there were no problems with compaction on their crops. I think these clowns in government don't have a clue how farming works.That's my ten cents. Good luck with the crops, and God bless you and your family from across the pond in Great Britain

    • @runkkari7868
      @runkkari7868 16 дней назад +2

      Ploughing has some benefits, but they don't allways pay the fuel bill.😁

  • @gunnarbeck225
    @gunnarbeck225 16 дней назад +1

    I agree with some compaction

  • @bigredgreg1
    @bigredgreg1 16 дней назад +1

    Good content. 👍

  • @frankscruggs4749
    @frankscruggs4749 16 дней назад +1

    Good video.

  • @danw6014
    @danw6014 16 дней назад

    I think by reading a lot of the comments that people don't understand that this will take a long time to establish a soil structure where compaction will be a minimal problem. One of the videos I saw on some of Dave Brant's practices. He had set up a White corn planter to plant tillage radishes in wheat stubble, then planted corn down those rows the following spring. Tillage, especially full tillage, means starting starting from scratch when it comes to using the covers for soil building.

  • @walterdavis4808
    @walterdavis4808 16 дней назад

    Have a good week

  • @AlextheDutchDairyfarmer
    @AlextheDutchDairyfarmer 16 дней назад

    👍👍

  • @brianogrady7900
    @brianogrady7900 14 дней назад

    Keep on farming Summer weather

  • @user-yr5ee9vm9e
    @user-yr5ee9vm9e 16 дней назад

    we growed the same exact corn every year for 10 yrs used the same fert, plowed, done the same every year only diff was rain hoping it would rain at silk to get the best crop

  • @waynejones5239
    @waynejones5239 15 дней назад

    Nice video

  • @davidkellogg8962
    @davidkellogg8962 16 дней назад +2

    Don't comment much but Marian colmer that makes the upgrades to the combines was no till for 30 year's but he is seeing that no till is okay but might have to do tillage every few years

    • @whjerts
      @whjerts 16 дней назад

      I agree, Marion has been doing research for years and has a wealth of knowledge. ruclips.net/video/3jOs8fjZnmw/видео.htmlsi=b9Qw1n6bO8Q7h55k

  • @jamesgreenawalt9713
    @jamesgreenawalt9713 16 дней назад +3

    Wouldn't it be better to till it 4" or 5" deep and put seeds 2" deep?? The roots would have an easier the in its 1st stages.??

  • @walterdavis4808
    @walterdavis4808 16 дней назад

    Good morning. This spring was a nightmare

  • @57fitter
    @57fitter 14 дней назад

    Vigilant

  • @katmandu8208
    @katmandu8208 16 дней назад +1

    👍🏻🍻

  • @johnnyfinn5546
    @johnnyfinn5546 16 дней назад

    Hi Wes, another great video. Wandering what you are planning to do to solve your compaction problem? Are you planning to put in a form of tillage radish in the fall as a cover crop? Deep ripping? As your SOM increases, so will your soil structure and aeration, but I image you will be planning a more pressing solution to this issue. Thanks again, and good luck to you.

  • @Ham68229
    @Ham68229 16 дней назад +1

    Wes, just a silly question, how often do you take soil samples? If your issue is a compaction problem, this is where you need to use a deep ripper or moldboard plow followed by a chisel to break up the shearing from a moldboard plow does. It's what we've done here, of course, we'd plow about every 5th -7th yr of planting. Can't help much with your slug issue, never had that issue here where I'm at. Aphids however, spray now before it really becomes a bigger issue for you. Do you spread manure on this particular field? If not, you should and work that into the soil along with gypsum, will help loosen the soil. Great video as always, cheers :)

  • @tbix1963
    @tbix1963 16 дней назад +3

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts, ideas and videos. Don’t know if you saw, millennial farmer last video was visiting John Deere research farm. Had some novelty automated tractors but more interesting was a sprayer that has two parallel sprayer systems two allow multiple products to be sprayed at the same time. One as a normal sprayer would apply and the second using cameras and computer automation to automatically detect unwanted plants and spot spray them individually reducing product used and only targeting problem spots. Looked a bit like a giant inkjet printer going across the field. Overall seemed interesting then came the deal breaker, oh ya the boom is so heavy we had to upgrade it to carbon fiber. Didn’t look very inexpensive or repairable. 😂
    Glad to hear the crops are coming around and looking better. Wishing you and your family the best.

  • @norman7179
    @norman7179 16 дней назад +1

    Wes, what gets rid of the slugs ? They seem to be quite a problem this year and I don't recall you saying they were an issue in the past.
    Thanks and good luck with finding something that WORKS !
    👍👍😊😊

    • @onelonleyfarmer
      @onelonleyfarmer  16 дней назад +2

      Ammonia sulfate will and a gallon of liquid nitrogen per 100 gallons when you spray

    • @norman7179
      @norman7179 16 дней назад +1

      @@onelonleyfarmer
      THANKS !
      👍👍😊😊

  • @runkkari7868
    @runkkari7868 16 дней назад +1

    I'm no cornexpert, but decomposing residue consumes nitrogen... if you have other issues like compaction fields with heavier reidue can suffer more.

    • @user-wh2lp8mc6d
      @user-wh2lp8mc6d 16 дней назад +1

      Lots of residue will also attract those slugs on wet years as well.

  • @CrimeVid
    @CrimeVid 14 дней назад

    Vigilant Wes, vigilant.

  • @craighinshaw2437
    @craighinshaw2437 16 дней назад

    Have you thought about doing what Dave brant use to do .He plant tillage in rows in the fall then in spring plant corn on top of radish row. Helps I guess.

    • @craighinshaw2437
      @craighinshaw2437 16 дней назад

      Should of said use tillage radish in row ahead of corn

  • @11T872
    @11T872 16 дней назад +1

    That's why I don't believe in no till especially corn, corn root don't like Competition and compacted soil, best I saw on internet for now to Bridge that gap is Brazilian planters.

  • @whjerts
    @whjerts 16 дней назад +3

    Trump is now favored to win New Jersey

  • @americanbeefranch
    @americanbeefranch 16 дней назад

    Sulphur moves all over. Other nutrients like calcium only go one direction. Calcium moves down.

  • @jedadruled984
    @jedadruled984 15 дней назад

    Maybe they look better cos uncovered soil warms up faster.
    Try putting a thermometer in the soil at those places.

  • @eddief3326
    @eddief3326 16 дней назад

    cold and wet.

  • @trs8947
    @trs8947 15 дней назад

    Ohh yes, i heard about those super beans from Ukraine, its like a super secret crop to take down the big guys out there😂

  • @burtzorn4059
    @burtzorn4059 16 дней назад

    Can't remember the guy that says you need to plow every 3 to 4 years to get the nutrients in the root zone. Other years you can do what you are doing.
    Or you can do what I suggested yesterday and run a subsoiler foot deep.
    Goes back to if you ever mudded a field in or a harvest.
    I takes that ground especially if it was done at harvest 3 to 4 to heal/recover from it .
    Many guys like you are doing something every 3to 4 years

    • @whjerts
      @whjerts 16 дней назад

      Maybe Marion Calmer of Calmer corn heads? He’s been no-till for years and discovered the fertilizer was all in the top few inches of soil and has started doing tillage to get the fertilizer down deeper.

  • @randystennes6996
    @randystennes6996 16 дней назад +1

    Knee high by the 4th of July?

  • @rodgercottrill3342
    @rodgercottrill3342 16 дней назад

    Its the rain

  • @TheGrumpyFarmer
    @TheGrumpyFarmer 16 дней назад

    What is your population goal with the drill? I shoot for 160,000 with my 1590 drill. With 90% germination that gets me roughly 145,000 stand or better if the germination is better than 90%

    • @onelonleyfarmer
      @onelonleyfarmer  16 дней назад

      140000 is what I was recommended by the seed company for these 3 variety's. I should have put down 220000because of the damn deer and slugs.

  • @carsons6519
    @carsons6519 16 дней назад

    Have you noticed any difference in the farms and places that you used the ripper you wnt and bought a couple years back? I know you ran it some. Just curious 👌

    • @onelonleyfarmer
      @onelonleyfarmer  16 дней назад +1

      Same yellow corn

    • @whjerts
      @whjerts 16 дней назад

      Wes, maybe give Marion Calmer of Calmer corn heads a call. He’s been no-till for years and has a wealth of knowledge and experience.

  • @BobBob-kb1fx
    @BobBob-kb1fx 16 дней назад +1

    Your corn needs some water and you have bad soil compaction

  • @cz_ww2117
    @cz_ww2117 16 дней назад

    Row crops in your area are a bitch to grow with the deer problem. Hope things turn for you.

  • @advandervelden1588
    @advandervelden1588 16 дней назад

    Comment

  • @joeldurheim5831
    @joeldurheim5831 16 дней назад

    Yellow corn all across the US, but we’re going to yield an average of 181😂😂😂😂 can you say we’re getting f’cked?

  • @oscaracme
    @oscaracme 16 дней назад

    focus on the problems, not the issues.

  • @johnbathgate904
    @johnbathgate904 16 дней назад

    Why does there seem to be so many dead trees surrounding these corn fields ?

    • @onelonleyfarmer
      @onelonleyfarmer  16 дней назад +4

      Emerald ash borers killed all the ash trees here

    • @user-wh2lp8mc6d
      @user-wh2lp8mc6d 16 дней назад

      Same here in Northern Wisconsin. Everyone just logging out all the ash trees before they die.

  • @yvonnejohnson1557
    @yvonnejohnson1557 16 дней назад

    Hey you didn't use your secret sauce this year call Gary

    • @11T872
      @11T872 16 дней назад

      Secret sausage 😂

  • @Farmerknowsbest
    @Farmerknowsbest 16 дней назад +1

    Around v3 the plant switches from living off the contents of the seed and transitions to living off photosynthesis and root uptake. The sins of spring often are on full display at this point. I'm guessing you have quite a bit of hatchet root going on in the discolored areas. The VT tool you own is notorious for creating a compaction layer at 2" deep that roots in the right condition can really struggle with. You need to bring a shovel with you EVERYTIME you walk a field. The root structure can tell a lot.

    • @onelonleyfarmer
      @onelonleyfarmer  16 дней назад +2

      I do carry a shovel and the compaction has been reduced greatly by using it. A vt does not create compaction a disc does.

    • @Farmerknowsbest
      @Farmerknowsbest 16 дней назад +1

      @@onelonleyfarmer a true VT tool doesn't add compaction. But when you run on any angle beyond 0 degrees on your turbotill it is just a disk and no longer a vt. They are extremely heavy and do a lot more surface damage than most know. Dig up some plants in your next video to humour me. LOL

  • @Mazel_Tov_888
    @Mazel_Tov_888 16 дней назад

    Never figured him for a click bait guy.

    • @onelonleyfarmer
      @onelonleyfarmer  16 дней назад +1

      What click bait?

    • @Mazel_Tov_888
      @Mazel_Tov_888 16 дней назад +1

      @@onelonleyfarmer Where's Syngenta?

    • @ZboeC5
      @ZboeC5 16 дней назад

      @@Mazel_Tov_888 They probably didn't want to be filmed but if you watched the video you'll know.

    • @Mazel_Tov_888
      @Mazel_Tov_888 16 дней назад

      @@ZboeC5 No no, I watched the video. I'm a new viewer, the thumb nail has a pic of a woman in the field, I heard a female voice behind the camera in the past i assumed she was going to be featured in this video, when she wasn't that's why called click bait. Being new I assumed Syngenta was the name of woman pictured in the thumb nail and the voice behind the camera the past video lol.

    • @richardradawetz8788
      @richardradawetz8788 16 дней назад

      @@Mazel_Tov_888 sygenta according to google is a huge seed chemical company based in china

  • @andrewj7994
    @andrewj7994 16 дней назад

    I thought it might have been Mg, thats from my vineyards experience. SOA was hard on my soils, I stopped using it due to Ph problems and locked up minerals. However we are all unique and so our our soils. I put Urea on now and use Serpentine as my main fert as our serpentine has Mg and is slow release . Good luck with the season.

    • @11T872
      @11T872 16 дней назад

      Urea will decrease high PH?

    • @andrewj7994
      @andrewj7994 16 дней назад

      I'm not sure but suspect so, I do a lot of trials, so far urea is cheapest N for buck

  • @BobBob-kb1fx
    @BobBob-kb1fx 16 дней назад +1

    You might should take some farming lessons

    • @11T872
      @11T872 16 дней назад

      😂

  • @emerson2you
    @emerson2you 16 дней назад

    Them slugs 🐌 are joe Biden lol and them Japan beetle is Billy gates lol always great content