Like 228 Good job Scott on different way he started to make things go faster. Footage not shakey at all. Working out really well. Drought insurance 🤣🤣. The zoom on phone is good full watch my friend
I like this a lot, easy to cultivate, easy to harvest, just looks better, and easy to adapt to something like 2 row planter or 6 row, or what ever really. Thanks for sharing, might be trying this next year.
My cousin pretty much built that planner from parts and pieces he scrounged up here's a link over to his channel so you can see more about it. Thank you very much for watching here. ruclips.net/video/zRbN38IFrjQ/видео.html 😊☕
That was exactly the way you listed up your tobacco. Sometimes a week ahead of planting. There were some farmers that waited until it rained before they planted a few days later.
It maybe an old fashion way to do this but it still works really good and it holds the water to soak in. Poor mans irrigation system ! i hope its a bumper crop of corn for Cousin Scott ! Cousin Bandit
We used a similar rig to that in the early 80s--4 #71 planters on a double toolbar with fertilizer attachment, ridged the rows up before planting with a Lilliston bedder.
Cousin Scott bought this stuff at pennies on the dollar brought it home worked on it and made it work. Thanks for watching I hope you're having a great Thanksgiving holiday🙂🍽
Glad to see Cousin Scott out there getting it done. It was cool how he made the mounds evenly spaced to plant the corn into. Hadn't seen that done before. Nice of you to be out there supporting him. You guys work well together - which is how farming should be. I look forward to watching the progress of Cousin's crops as well as yours as this spring and summer progress.
Charlie my friends I'm headed out the door here shortly to go and plant my first field soybeans. I have a really good feeling this should just be a fun day.
Did he cultivated and knock the ridges down and bring them back up as hills around the roots of the Corn? And at the same time make another fertilizer application?
@@SoybeanFarmer3300 I believe the first pass was with a harrow that brought some dirt into the row and covered small weeds. Next was a cultivator that moved more dirt. Then at least one more pass with the cultivator. This was in the 30's and 40's so there was no fertilizer.
Cousin said it was an old school technique to make better use of fertilizer. Thanks for supporting this channel by watching the videos and leaving comments.
Great to see it! We used to do the same method. Only difference was when we ripped we put a fertilizer box on it as well to get some deep place 1/2 of our p&k by welding a pipe on the ripper shanks. And then use the rolling cultivator with middle busters to bed and fertilize shallow with nitrogen added. My grandfather always said that you will always have moisture 10-12 inches down most years so put it where the moisture would be. Our corn always stayed green a week or 2 longer in a drought.
Never seen anyone plant corn like that. Will be very interesting to see how it turns out. All the best to you guys and thanks again for taking us along!!
I've always believed in having the fertilizer in the row. My planters have fertilizer distributors on it so fertilizer goes in the row as I'm plantings. Ripping the ground deep I'd gonna allow the roots to go deep into the soil.. Scott really did a good job. Forward to seeing how it works out.
Thank you Mr SBF for bringing this to us!! I think cousin Scott is truly on to something here, can't wait to see the corn growing!! Boy that beautiful field of rows brings back many memories of the tobacco days!! Awesome footage and explanation nod his process, he is too modest...very genius idea I think!! I know you have a set plan most years, how is the soybean planting looking for this season? Seems we are having alot of nice warm days lately! Thank you my friend, hope you have a blessed day, look fwd to seeing more of this!! 😉😁☕☕☕
Good to see Ol' Cousin Scott getting his corn planted. Have to admit, he took a very different approach to planting the corn this season. Probably a much better to have done what he did for the fertilizer that way than to just broadcast it over the field with the current prices being what they are. Thanks for sharing. Take care.
I used to do a bunch of ridge till Keeps you high and dry in wet conditions and so much better use of fertilizer. Tools we had could make ridges apply anhydrous and dry fertilizer in one pass. Then come back with corn planter and could apply liquid nitrogen and more dry fertilizer if needed. Only reason we went away from it was due to equipment cost for a 16 row was major sticker shock. Now with GPS a guy could layout a whole field on ridges easy .
Jake Z. was the place I saw the strip-till stuff and was very impressed. Markis I can't spell Jake's last name correctly but he had a great Channel I sure do miss him.
I have never seen this done on acreage scale, only in small gardens, but it stands to reason. So much so, that I am gonna try it on a 3 acre field of my own corn.
When I read your comment it sounded like you just kind of looked around your farm and said yeah I got this piece of equipment this Implement and I can certainly perform that function. yeah I will do it!🙂☕
Just putting the fertilizer where it's needed makes sense, is this method going to make any difference at harvesting. The field looks good and best wishes for a good crop on it, were just coming into rainy season here so that will cut down on my watering chore, just have to pull weeds instead. Take care you all and thanks for posting.
Our seasonal weather doesn't seem to be so seasonal anymore so I'm just curious is your rainy season still pretty much in its normal spot in the time zone stream of things 🤔
@@SoybeanFarmer3300 Rainy Season is supposed to start in May through Nov., But it has started a bit earlier a few years back. I'm just a couple of miles north of the Saigon river so we get cooling winds coming over and I'm sitting in one now. The Mekong area is seeing higher sea levels but are also seeing settlement of land due to bore hole water extraction. We have two bore holes one for the house with filter system and one for the 3 plots of garden, we only take the minimum needed not only to conserve the water but power cost as well. This April has only seen a few showers that have been most welcome, except the 16th as we were having a street party for my 77th. guests grabbed fully laden food tables and headed into the car port where we continued no problem.
You'll get there in good time my friend. I'm headed out the door here in a few minutes to go and start working on my first field and then plant it in soybeans. Thanks for watching here Tim.
Most of all peanut farmers here in Eastern North Carolina plant peanut on flat ground. They break the ground or chisel plow and then run a field cultivator then plant.
I get busy I get involved and get distracted from RUclips and then come back and find two really nice people engaged in a conversation with one another I think this is awesome good job y'all🙂👍☕☕☕
Good morning Soybean Farmer. We are going to be at least another week up here in Iowa before we can plant here. The ground temperature is barely 40 degrees and the extended forecast has it down either nearly freezing or even slightly below for every night. A lot of cloudy days and high winds this week. As of last Wednesday morning, the price of anhydrous ammonia was $1800/ton. Corn is up over $ 8/bu. now and beans are really high too. Still, with all that, this is going to be an interesting year for farming. 100 acres of some really rough ground 5 miles north of me just sold for $11,000 / acre. Some really good ground about the same distance south of me just sold for $ 17,000 / acre. I realize when it comes to the ground that they aren't making any more of it, but this is insanity. Now that the Biden administration has done away with the stepped up basis, there is no way that these people can pass on their land as inheritance to their next generation family. They won't be able to pay the capital gains tax on it.
www.forbes.com/sites/taxnotes/2021/09/29/is-repealing-the-tax-free-basis-step-up-really-dead/?sh=6a29a16b34da Another classic example of the socialist as they seek to obtain wealth by any means possible other than simply earning it for themselves. I count myself as exceedingly well blessed because I do not have to look towards pudding head and his guy-0-mite guberment for my provisions. God is my single source provider for and in all things. 🙏🙏🙏
Like 228 Good job Scott on different way he started to make things go faster. Footage not shakey at all. Working out really well. Drought insurance 🤣🤣. The zoom on phone is good full watch my friend
Fran, thank you very much for dropping by and taking time to watch the videos
Great job cousin Scott!!
Thanks Mike
Slick! I love learning from people like you guys
James thank you very much for that and thank you for being here supporting this channel by watching the videos.
I like this a lot, easy to cultivate, easy to harvest, just looks better, and easy to adapt to something like 2 row planter or 6 row, or what ever really. Thanks for sharing, might be trying this next year.
My cousin pretty much built that planner from parts and pieces he scrounged up here's a link over to his channel so you can see more about it. Thank you very much for watching here.
ruclips.net/video/zRbN38IFrjQ/видео.html
😊☕
Nice to see seeds in the ground!
Gene, it sure is and I'm glad we got started. Thanks very much for dropping by and watching the videos here.😊☕
Love that Old school planting techniques my granddad did this for years good job
Terry thanks for your positive support here at the channel.
Looking good
Thanks 🙂
That was exactly the way you listed up your tobacco. Sometimes a week ahead of planting. There were some farmers that waited until it rained before they planted a few days later.
Interested to see how this turns out. Pretty neat idea. Haven't seen corn planted this way before!
Stay tuned and we'll both find out🙂☕☕
Enjoy the video SBF. Looks great! God bless
Greg thank you very much and thanks for being here.🙂☕☕
Looking good brother
Greg, thank you brother. 🙂
SBF this is a brilliant video, thanks for explaing what Cousin Scott is doing, it looks like a brilliant idea, awesome footache aswell
Jan thank you 🙂
It maybe an old fashion way to do this but it still works really good and it holds the water to soak in. Poor mans irrigation system ! i hope its a bumper crop of corn for Cousin Scott ! Cousin Bandit
Here's hoping it gets higher than the bumper!!!!!!
Cousin Bandit thank you very much for that well wishing you put on my cousin.🙂
Hope in things not yet seen👍🙂☕☕
David my friend higher than the bumper is very nice.👍
We used a similar rig to that in the early 80s--4 #71 planters on a double toolbar with fertilizer attachment, ridged the rows up before planting with a Lilliston bedder.
Cousin Scott bought this stuff at pennies on the dollar brought it home worked on it and made it work.
Thanks for watching I hope you're having a great Thanksgiving holiday🙂🍽
Glad to see Cousin Scott out there getting it done. It was cool how he made the mounds evenly spaced to plant the corn into. Hadn't seen that done before. Nice of you to be out there supporting him. You guys work well together - which is how farming should be. I look forward to watching the progress of Cousin's crops as well as yours as this spring and summer progress.
Charlie my friends I'm headed out the door here shortly to go and plant my first field soybeans. I have a really good feeling this should just be a fun day.
@@SoybeanFarmer3300 Have a great day out there, my friend!
Cool. My grandpa did it similar but different. He planted in the ditches and had ridges between the rows.
Did he cultivated and knock the ridges down and bring them back up as hills around the roots of the Corn? And at the same time make another fertilizer application?
@@SoybeanFarmer3300 I believe the first pass was with a harrow that brought some dirt into the row and covered small weeds. Next was a cultivator that moved more dirt. Then at least one more pass with the cultivator. This was in the 30's and 40's so there was no fertilizer.
That's the way my daddy planted corn in the 60s and 70s.
Cousin said it was an old school technique to make better use of fertilizer. Thanks for supporting this channel by watching the videos and leaving comments.
That's clever! Y'all be safe.
Thanks Herb.
Great to see it! We used to do the same method. Only difference was when we ripped we put a fertilizer box on it as well to get some deep place 1/2 of our p&k by welding a pipe on the ripper shanks. And then use the rolling cultivator with middle busters to bed and fertilize shallow with nitrogen added. My grandfather always said that you will always have moisture 10-12 inches down most years so put it where the moisture would be. Our corn always stayed green a week or 2 longer in a drought.
I really enjoyed this comment I read it and obtained the wisdom I saw the depth I so appreciate you sharing this with me.🙂☕☕
Never seen anyone plant corn like that. Will be very interesting to see how it turns out. All the best to you guys and thanks again for taking us along!!
Tim thank you very much for your comment and thanks for being here.
I've always believed in having the fertilizer in the row. My planters have fertilizer distributors on it so fertilizer goes in the row as I'm plantings. Ripping the ground deep I'd gonna allow the roots to go deep into the soil.. Scott really did a good job. Forward to seeing how it works out.
Robert thank you very much for this and thank you for your support of this channel
🙂
Layin' it down 👍
Yep🙂 thanks my friend
wow yall got it going good i always heard you can get more seed in a crooked row lol looks good keep nup the good work
The row is more the product of the wear in the steering mechanisms in our older tractors. 🙂☕
Glad you guys are getting your crops planted hope you have a great year and looking forward to the harvest videos
Stephen thank you very much 🙂
Good video
Thank you Ronnie thanks for stopping by the channel
Thank you Mr SBF for bringing this to us!! I think cousin Scott is truly on to something here, can't wait to see the corn growing!! Boy that beautiful field of rows brings back many memories of the tobacco days!! Awesome footage and explanation nod his process, he is too modest...very genius idea I think!! I know you have a set plan most years, how is the soybean planting looking for this season? Seems we are having alot of nice warm days lately! Thank you my friend, hope you have a blessed day, look fwd to seeing more of this!! 😉😁☕☕☕
Nelson thank you for watching🙂☕
@@SoybeanFarmer3300 Yes sir always my friend!!
Looks good guys 👍🌽🇺🇸
Thanks Keith🙂
Good to see Ol' Cousin Scott getting his corn planted. Have to admit, he took a very different approach to planting the corn this season. Probably a much better to have done what he did for the fertilizer that way than to just broadcast it over the field with the current prices being what they are. Thanks for sharing. Take care.
Ron thank you for your well expressed support for my cousin's decision to conserve fertilizer and use more directly what was applied🙂
Better get the Farmall 140 ready. And set the cultivators ready.
😂 lol. Thanks for that I needed a good laugh this morning.
I used to do a bunch of ridge till Keeps you high and dry in wet conditions and so much better use of fertilizer. Tools we had could make ridges apply anhydrous and dry fertilizer in one pass. Then come back with corn planter and could apply liquid nitrogen and more dry fertilizer if needed. Only reason we went away from it was due to equipment cost for a 16 row was major sticker shock. Now with GPS a guy could layout a whole field on ridges easy .
That was interesting thanks for sharing that with me AJ🙂☕☕
When bean planting going to start? Hope you guys have a great year.
Beans went in the ground yesterday got just under 4 acres planted. 🙂
Back in the day when I was growing up. Almost all farmers planted corn on beds. Now everyone does no till or strip till for planting.
Jake Z. was the place I saw the strip-till stuff and was very impressed. Markis I can't spell Jake's last name correctly but he had a great Channel I sure do miss him.
We farm all crops in south texas in rows cotton corn milo beans etc.
Sam thank you for dropping by the channel and watching the video. Row crops are all we've ever done around here other than the hay businesses.
Looks like it's working out.. until it's up and he missed a strip..lol
I'm sure he didn't miss anything.
It was a good day getting that much more of the fields here planted. Ed thanks very much for being here supporting this channel.
I have never seen this done on acreage scale, only in small gardens, but it stands to reason. So much so, that I am gonna try it on a 3 acre field of my own corn.
When I read your comment it sounded like you just kind of looked around your farm and said yeah I got this piece of equipment this Implement and I can certainly perform that function. yeah I will do it!🙂☕
@@SoybeanFarmer3300 it’s in the ground today. Good lord willing, we will have a crop! Best wishes to you and cuz Scott
Just putting the fertilizer where it's needed makes sense, is this method going to make any difference at harvesting.
The field looks good and best wishes for a good crop on it, were just coming into rainy season here so that will cut down on my watering chore, just have to pull weeds instead.
Take care you all and thanks for posting.
Our seasonal weather doesn't seem to be so seasonal anymore so I'm just curious is your rainy season still pretty much in its normal spot in the time zone stream of things 🤔
@@SoybeanFarmer3300 Rainy Season is supposed to start in May through Nov., But it has started a bit earlier a few years back. I'm just a couple of miles north of the Saigon river so we get cooling winds coming over and I'm sitting in one now. The Mekong area is seeing higher sea levels but are also seeing settlement of land due to bore hole water extraction. We have two bore holes one for the house with filter system and one for the 3 plots of garden, we only take the minimum needed not only to conserve the water but power cost as well.
This April has only seen a few showers that have been most welcome, except the 16th as we were having a street party for my 77th. guests grabbed fully laden food tables and headed into the car port where we continued no problem.
I always hated it when rain showed up and ruined a good party. 🤔
As long as the fertilizer and seed aren’t laying together he’ll be OK
The risk goes up for that concern when you put the fertilizer in the row like that.
We haven't been able to get any thing started yet. It is still wet.
You'll get there in good time my friend. I'm headed out the door here in a few minutes to go and start working on my first field and then plant it in soybeans. Thanks for watching here Tim.
👍👍
Thanks Tom
Most of the peanut farmers use this method of planting, because it gives the peanuts a bed of relatively soft soil for the pegs to burrow into....
Most of all peanut farmers here in Eastern North Carolina plant peanut on flat ground. They break the ground or chisel plow and then run a field cultivator then plant.
@@markisb3585 My neighbor Runs a ripper bedder.... and has a twin-row planter...it knocks the tops off the beds...
@@farmingforfunandprofit940 Ok. Thanks.
I get busy I get involved and get distracted from RUclips and then come back and find two really nice people engaged in a conversation with one another I think this is awesome good job y'all🙂👍☕☕☕
Good morning Soybean Farmer. We are going to be at least another week up here in Iowa before we can plant here. The ground temperature is barely 40 degrees and the extended forecast has it down either nearly freezing or even slightly below for every night. A lot of cloudy days and high winds this week.
As of last Wednesday morning, the price of anhydrous ammonia was $1800/ton. Corn is up over $ 8/bu. now and beans are really high too. Still, with all that, this is going to be an interesting year for farming.
100 acres of some really rough ground 5 miles north of me just sold for $11,000 / acre. Some really good ground about the same distance south of me just sold for $ 17,000 / acre. I realize when it comes to the ground that they aren't making any more of it, but this is insanity. Now that the Biden administration has done away with the stepped up basis, there is no way that these people can pass on their land as inheritance to their next generation family. They won't be able to pay the capital gains tax on it.
www.forbes.com/sites/taxnotes/2021/09/29/is-repealing-the-tax-free-basis-step-up-really-dead/?sh=6a29a16b34da
Another classic example of the socialist as they seek to obtain wealth by any means possible other than simply earning it for themselves.
I count myself as exceedingly well blessed because I do not have to look towards pudding head and his guy-0-mite guberment for my provisions. God is my single source provider for and in all things. 🙏🙏🙏
I would love to have the same "kind of" farm someday... how many acres do you have?(+rent)
Open plantable land there's 24 acres. Thank you very much for watching the videos here at this channel.
Putting seed and dry fertilizer in a row is how they all used to do it. Can't do that with liquid fertilizer
Cousin said when he came up with the plan that it was old school, like the way they used to do it. Thanks for watching here.
👍👏👏👏
Thanks ozz 🙂
So when are we going to see you in the field planting some soybeans
I'm headed out there today to see if I can get started planting on my beans I think it's going to go well.
Cousins planting idea looks like its slicker than snot. Give that man a cigar!!!
Clark thanks for supporting this channel by being here watching the videos and a special thanks for the support of my cousin in his idea.🙂☕☕
Cousin is a lot smarter than he looks and acts, lol! Does he know where he put his drink?
That was just a cup for scooping seed. Thomas thanks very much for being here supporting this channel by watching the videos and leaving comments.