Never thought of it, but good idea! That's why I am here haha. Looking for N alternatives other than Urea due to my inability to time its application with measurable rain
Do any of you guys have experience with using liquid N for corn rather than urea?
I have 5 acres planted and due to schedules etc. timing the post emergence urea application within the needed rain window to not lose all of it is extremely difficult for me. Can i just spray it when I clean up...
You are going to get a bunch of opinions here. I'd encourage keeping as much in beans/grain as possible. This will keep deer around as the fall progresses into winter. You have to have them.
If you are trying to increase October attractiveness - till up and plant 1/4 acre of radishes and...
Ive transplanted probably thousands of cedars the size that Rob posted pictures of. I'd say 4ft max then maybe thin a few decades from now, but I'm not there yet.
I also second transplanting the smaller ones, seems like 99% survive and thrive right away. Cedars are MEAN, great for transplanting
I havent messed with alfalfa before, but plan to on 3-4 acres of a new parcel I am acquiring next month in E IL. I have access to a G series drill and of course conventional tillage & broadcast seeding as well. I'd like to get it rolling this spring. Is there any specific variety that I...
Thanks for sharing pics. Always great having a visual and getting to see what other guys are referring to when they say this or that.
Bassattackr - I really enjoy your posts, you have a lot of cool things going on
Absolutely no brainer - unfortunately a nice squared off 100ac of pure tillable in those large wide open tillable areas is going to be in the teens per acre more times than not.
I know very well a guy who's a built a large, successful family company and buys up a lot of ground for production...
I'm going to try the hedge ball slurry this spring.
Not only do they make great thickets, but fantastic tree stand trees if you can find one to get in. The "tunnel" under a mature hedgerow has yielded many close quarter buck encounters over the years.
That makes sense. They certainly weren't planing bare roots from a nursery, so was wondering if that wasn't how they got established. Going to try it.
Do they grow fairly quick? I can't recall ever seeing a young one to observe, just the 100yo ones that already exist
I believe the theme of this thread was eradicating hedge trees, but I would love to plant some. I have hedgerows in my blood and want to do my part in replacing a small percentage of the miles that bored farmers have removed.
Has anyone done this? How did the old timers do them? bare...
Very cool and generous!! Agreed on the E2 all time ranking. Have some that have to be 10+ years old. 8AA and walk away, most still running in shed season
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