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Dr John Baker talks about no-till in CRP ground

The Do’s and Don’t’s of No-Tilling Arable Crops into CRP Ground

 Dr C John Baker, CEO, Baker No-Tillage Ltd, Feilding, New Zealand and Pullman, Washington, USA

Cross Slot in CRP

It seems that everyone is astonished by those who claim that no-tilling into sod is easy. But it really can be so with the right equipment. Nonetheless, let’s be clear what we mean by sod. The fairway of a golf course is a vastly different proposition from Conservation Reserve Program land. But both could be described as sod and the same machinery can be used for both. The key element in both is a dense network of fibrous roots close to the soil surface. The difference lies in what is above the soil surface. Mown grass is characterised by tightly-packed short orderly plants. CRP land might be better described as a “low-flying jungle”.

In relation to CRP, there are two main considerations.

The first is how to physically cope with the tangle of grasses, weeds, legumes and perhaps pests without (a) blocking the machine, and (b) destroying all the good biological things that have happened to the soil in the past 10 years?

The second is how to create a biological environment that favours and protects the newly-sown crop, but also harnesses the wonderful biological assets that 10 years of non-production will have carefully created and nurtured?

Sadly, the problem of physically handling the biomass often compromises the issue of making best use of it. But it need not be that way.

To understand how best to handle the situation, it is necessary to understand where this particular author comes from and what has dominated his no-tillage experiences to date. The author is from New Zealand where most agricultural production centres on pasture production even although arable cropping is also viable and plays an important role. It is the interface between these two systems that is of most relevance to re-cropping of CRP land because that is essentially what New Zealand farmers have been doing virtually on a daily basis for a couple of hundred years.

The structure and productivity of New Zealand soils deteriorates just as quickly, and its tillage methods are just as destructive as in North America. But New Zealand has the advantage of a benign climate that allows two things to happen: (1) Grass-fed animals remain on fields all year around, and (2) New Zealand seldom sees lying snow on agricultural land for more than a few days and it is seldom so cold that winter growth stops altogether. It just slows down compared with spring or autumn. Animal production is therefore regularly integrated with cropping by the same farmers. Double cropping is common. Rotations often start when cropped soils deteriorate so badly (after, say 3 - 5 years of double-cropping) that farmers revert to a similar period of continuous pasture in order to attempt to repair the damage. Rotation and integration are therefore household words in New Zealand farming.

Some of the newer New Zealand systems involve substituting a succession of short-duration forage crops (including hybrid grasses, cereals, bassicas, legumes and herbs) for long-term pastures in order to maximize meat, wool and milk production from sheep and cattle. Such intensive, high-production forage crops may have growth-cycles of less than 6 months, making reseeding a frequent and repetitive undertaking that relies heavily of fail-safe no-tillage. But 50+% gains in dry matter production are common, compared with long-term pastures, and this translates directly into profitability.

Still other systems involve pasture renovation in which long-term pastures are improved by injecting improved species at regular intervals into the base pastures without their total destruction.

All of these systems either benefit from, or are totally reliant upon “fail-safe” no-tillage. In some cases, seeding takes place twice (and even three times) per year. More importantly, because pastures play such an integral role in New Zealand agriculture, much of the no-tillage seeding is into sod. Indeed the original objective of developing New Zealand’s Cross Slot® no-tillage system in the first place, was to find a way of seeding successfully into sod.

Applying these every-day undertakings to the specific case of seeding into CRP land, the following principles will apply: 

Let’s hope that current famers do not simply repeat history



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