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AgPhD
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Добавлен 21 фев 2008
Since 1998, Ag PhD has been on a mission to help farmers be better stewards of the land, and increase their yields and profitability. Brian and Darren Hefty host this half-hour television show from Baltic, SD. This channel contains full episodes of Ag PhD, as well as show segments, such as Farm Basics, Iron Talk, and the Weed of the Week.
The Green Bridge
Farm Basics from Ag PhD Episode #1369 | Air Date 6/30/24 - The 'green bridge' is not a path you want to tread. The Hefty brothers explain how breaking this link can lead to healthier crops and higher yields.
Просмотров: 1 062
Видео
Day Length and Crop Growth
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.19 часов назад
Farm Basics from Ag PhD Episode #1368 | Air Date 6/23/24 - Brian and Darren discuss the difference that latitude can make when it comes to how many hours of sunlight your crop can get during the growing season.
Longer Grass in Lawns and Pastures
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.14 дней назад
Longer Grass in Lawns and Pastures
2024 Neal Kinsey Soil & Fertility Seminar
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.4 месяца назад
2024 Neal Kinsey Soil & Fertility Seminar
Biotechnology and the Covid Vaccine
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.4 месяца назад
Biotechnology and the Covid Vaccine
Stupid conventional monoculture videos
Dicamba is for weeds . Leave the farms wtf
So if you were on a hilly field would there be any advantages or disadvantages to strip tilling the higher spots and no tilling the lower spots?
Or just allow hunting on the property
Build and feed the soil.
Or better still stop using their gmo seed...
Why exactly? GM seers perform superior in pretty much every way, it’s absolutely a worthwhile investment.
Depends on location and how aggressively the land is tilled around you. If you’re tilling a small lot in a natural area it works great. Tilling the entire countryside is native genocide
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Looks like Southern IL soil. Ours in Western Tennessee is a tan light brown color loaded so thick with clay it turns to concrete when dry. Yeah our topsoil errosion is terrible. Cotton seems to love it though.
I don’t get all the “VT” “GMO” and Chemical hate lately on all your videos…it seems like they have spiked a lot lately on all your videos
Seems like for whatever reason their stuff has been recommended to a very ill informed audience lately. It’s definitely strange.
Farmers don't do something if it doesn't work...we can't change practices and lose money because someone on the 🚽 is commenting from their condo... every farmer has bills to pay and they have much higher education than people understand or are led to believe.
Brian and Darren, the "Chem Kids".
My guy this vid is literally dedicated to an alternate solution to reduce chemical usage 💀
@@Beyonder8335 They are literally talking about killing all crops for a few weeks between crops.
@@stoamnyfarms and that is a chemical thing how? The whole idea of this was that by breaking the green bridge you can reduce pest and disease pressure, managing them by starving them out for a couple weeks rather than spraying for them.
@@stoamnyfarms and? They were talking about using that 2 week period reduce dieseases and pests by simply starving them out. What do you think that has to do with chemical?
@@Beyonder8335 They spray it all with roundup to kill those plants. How do you start to argue with others and not know that? Did you think they just walked around and pulled all the plants up by the roots?
R-o-o-t 😂😂😂
Prayers to you and yours. 🙏 🤲
Said A's. Soap. Not soddy.
Planting a nitrogen fixing cover crop between cycles can help. So would going back to medieval times and using crop rotation. Especially if you have some grazing animals visit the fallow field a few times during its lay year
I want to know about the soybean rows in the last of the video. What is their row spacing and what was the corn spacing from the previous year? That is beautiful.
Enlist doesn’t work anymore… 24D smokes water hemp when I spot spray… enlist is a scam … water hemp laughs at it doesn’t even slow it down
Whats the point of a cover crop if its dead all winter
So this greatly reduces the amount of alluvium coming off of farms and in to waterways thus keeping a lot of the top soil in place.????
How is that "weeds" can draw up minerals to the surface?
this led to the dust bowl
You desrve oats of the biggest caliber
What about 2 4D superior
im just starting to think that there's wayyyyyy too many details to consider for a job that pays so damn poorly
It's very different to hot places ✌️👍
Black soil. Not on my farm! You guys need more regenerative ag content!
Lmaooooo this guy dosent understand geothermal heat 😂
I don't think YOU understand geothermal heat.
I use both in substitute sometime I use citric acid sometime I use ZA fertilizer (ammonium sulfate), the same goal was just to lower the PH
Yeah leaving the soil bare in the winter is borderline stupid, it shows you have never taken a soil class and would rather spend money on fertilizer than a light pesticide at the beginning of spring before planting or after getting a stand. It’s not soil it’s dirt on the top because it’s held together by nothing but other clay particles sticking everything together. Hate seeing beautiful dirt used and abused 😂
You must not have the high winds like we do every spring in SE. Saskatchewan!
I saw a picture where some Ag dept in Iowa had carefully dug down beside a corn stalk and carefully brushed away all of the dirt from the roots. They extended 8 or more feet into the ground and there were literally tens of thousands of them --from barely visible to 1/16th of inch in diameter. The ends of the roots branched out 10-12 ft !! Amazing for one corn plant !!!
Main problem i encountered in fields is a lack of boron and carbon ( 19 farms 190 acre total, cbd hemp crop).
Not true, the used crop rotation. No errosion in 2000 years.
Sure
Wow I can’t believe you still use that crap
Well yeah because it works better when the soils ph is lower since the average is around 7/9 and the ideal is 5.5/6.8 edit: Citric Acid is also more environmentally friendly than ammonium sulfate as ammonium is heavy in salts and your adding salt to salt fertilizers to salt ph regulators which is another issue of EC in your soil
Roundup?Really?
Mmmmmmmm, cancer fluid
Pretty much is weed control and round up vs starvation. To cultivate without any herbicides does not yield enough to eat... Anyway we eat too much, may be food rationing is the answer
Just gotta wear proper PPE and spray in the right conditions and you’ll be fine
And in one tillage you kill 50% of the fungi that you need in the soil
Do herbicides, fungicides or pesticides disturb the fungi and soil food web?
@@gfgf2417 I’d look up effects of each one, but yeah, if they designed to kill things broadly doubly yes
@@gfgf2417 they can get a lot done by just spreading AEROBIC compost tea on foilar application. It basically puts good bacteria where bad bacteria want to hold on to and can’t as a result
When you use soil as the plant holder and killed everything else except weeds😂😂😂 microbiology and micro fungi are growing under the salts you are pumping out on the crops 🤔
If the microbiology wasn’t still there residue wouldn’t be breaking down and a lot of fertilizers would be completely useless, as they rely on microbes to convert them into bioavailable nutrients. As long as you don’t drastically overdo it the salt levels isn’t high enough to cause any harm.
Well,that's where Roundup comes in for weeds
How much nitrogen do you recome for corn on corn?
What about npk
Nitrogen phosphorus potassium is npk
@@Bennie32831 yes
I'll never appreciate them,,those pods can hurt..Today I pulled a bunch off the Elderberry, and Columbine..If it looks like it's smothering Poison Ivy,,then it can stay awhile 🦉
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Fertilized deserts
Na Take a biological approach. Use mixed spices cover crops.
High speed discs aint it. Use a disc ripper in the fall and a field cultivator in the spring. Why is this so difficult people?
Notice theres nothing alive in that poisoned dirt go out in the woods and take a shovel full its full of life yall are killing the soil and because of that fruits and vegetables from the 1950s had 8 times as much nutrients in them thats why everyones fat cause all the food is empty calories with no nutrition in it
That is a rut? ROOT!!!!!!
I’ve been continuous cropping since 1979, minimum till since 1983 and no till since 1995. Since no till we go straight up and back on a half mile each year. Saves fuel, wear and tear on the trucks at harvest ( no chasing the combine) and above all , keeps the majority of last years stubble, still standing to protect seedlings from wind , and catch snow in the winter for the following crop next year.It’s a no brainer!
@@orvalaltwasser505 works great in plains not so much in states like Michigan. We have water, we have wind, we have freezing temperatures and we have a diverse soil system. We recognize what to do in each of our fields by soil testing late summer and early spring. We did it ourselves. I guess that's why we were producing 240+ bushel acre corn in the late seventies and early eighties regularly. Don't even get me going about our soybeans
@@orvalaltwasser505 do you realize that that stubble rots underground and makes nitrogen especially when you spread lime before tilling? We did that with our more sandy loam situations especially when on top of a hill.
@@brettkowalski Brett. We only apply about 60 pounds of actual nitrogen, 15 pounds of phosphate and 6 pounds of sulfur per acre. This land does not need lime yet . Some of my neighbors are at 250 pounds of nitrogen. Eventually this area will be adding lime too to balance out the acid inthe soil from high nitrogen inputs. Also, our area lately gets barely enough rain to capitalize on the extra N.
@orvalaltwasser505 how do you put on your nitrogen on a no till system? I'm trying to learn to maybe flip the farm that way when I take over 🤔
@@jimbobhootenanny4440 We put our seed and all of our nitrogen, phosphate and sulfur into the ground , usually in April. The seed drill is 40 feet wide . It is a double disc drill . It has two seperate ranks that the discs mount on. The front rank holds 64 independently sprung openers to place the seed into the ground. The rear rank holds 32 disc openers to place the fertilizer into the ground. The seed discs are placed 7.5 inches apart from each other, while the fertilizer discs are at 15 inches and run between the rows that the seed discs do. This places the fertilizer away from direct contact with the seed by 3.75 inches to prevent the seed from fertilizer burn. Both ranks can be lifted or lowered hydraulically from the tractor. Bothe seed and fertilizer are held in seperate tanks , and hydraulically driven fans push the seed and fertilizer through seperate delivery tubes into the disc openers and into the ground. We have been using this type of system for around 30 years. I would never go back to a tillage system of seeding now. However- be prepared to do a lot of weed spraying with this type of farming. Hope I didn’t over complicate this answer. Good luck in your endeavours. Happy farming!