The Undercutter Method for Winter Wheat-Summer Fallow Farming

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  • Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
  • A DVD which covers farming systems in the 3.5 million dryland acres in Washington and Oregon that receive less than 12 inches of precipitation per year. The program explains the current cropping systems, some of the problem areas, and some innovative solutions developed by farmers and researchers, with the goal to give an understanding of new tillage systems to farmers in the area. Specific attention will be given to the research and farmer results with the undercutter method.

Комментарии • 7

  • @verngoossen3628
    @verngoossen3628 2 года назад

    This sweep plow has been used i the great American Desert --Western Kansas for years since the 1950's --- nothing new except the location --- Nobel sweep plows---

  • @samseale2071
    @samseale2071 10 месяцев назад

    How does the undercutter survive use in rocky soil?

  • @Washington-rf5id
    @Washington-rf5id 5 лет назад +1

    I farm in the horse heaven, we just use a chisel plow and follow it with rod weeders for our summer fallow

  • @99Z155
    @99Z155 8 лет назад +2

    I see very little difference between this undercutter and a modern flex king sweep plow.

  • @lennardbock
    @lennardbock 5 лет назад

    They need a Crossslot from New Zealand.

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP 5 лет назад +1

    (no-till) id love to try this farmland up with a permaculture farmer who could make this system fly and bring production up 5 fold. yikes... I'd tillage radish my way into that wheat. so cover crop heavy tillage radish .. (if in warm area graze that radish) if in midwest winter kill. the radish stores your water. also, I wonder if there's a permanent deep-rooting grassland seed mix then do a "pasture crop system" for the wheat. seems like this whole system is poor farming practices. I don't think "wheat" is the right crop for this type of land, to begin with. it's such low productivity out of the land when that same land before those farmers were farming it. was probably super protective in its native state. which means that we got a VERY poor farming system we are trying to "force" wheat out of.

  • @microsoilenhancersinspirey5750
    @microsoilenhancersinspirey5750 11 месяцев назад

    The reason you loose your cover is lack of food for the biology in the summer fallow.
    4 or more species of a biological stimulant will hold more water and maintain cover on the ground.
    Shalom!.