No-till will not work here on my farm.

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • In this video I talk about no-till and conventional planning and a update on second cutting alfalfa and I talked about the wheat leave your comments let me know I'm just learning to but our goal is to 285 bushel corn

Komentáře • 163

  • @Farmerknowsbest
    @Farmerknowsbest Před 6 lety +64

    You didn't try no-til, you tried planting corn without tillage. Conventional tillage is a series of bandaid solutions to growing crops, all reactive. No-til is a systems approach to ag setting the soil up to prevent problems before they begin. I used to think exactly the same way you do when we did all kinds of recreational tillage. No-til won't work here was my mindset. Well I was wrong. Are you?

    • @warrencorcoran9824
      @warrencorcoran9824 Před 6 lety +2

      I love recreational tillage, cant take the boy out of the man,, nor the man from his tractor. I,m getting older, I was thinking I might get the biggest caterpillar vibratory compacting roller there is, compact my fields down hard as concrete, so I can spend more time deep tilling, tilling, cultivating, spading etc. hahahahaha, In Golf, there's a saying, "we drive for show, Put for dough" I like driving the ball 600 feet into the woods, way past the flag, cup,I love farm equipment, I cant believe I get paid to run it, its a mechanical love affair my friends. god bless, hope you laughed.. Snooka

    • @TheRipeTomatoFarms
      @TheRipeTomatoFarms Před 6 lety +6

      This +1. No till works best on the WORST soils. Its not about "not tilling and hoping for the best". That will fail 9 time out of 10 on ALL soils. No till HAS to be used in conjuction with other sustainable practices the most important being the addition of organic layers (ie mulching).

  • @gregkortbein5108
    @gregkortbein5108 Před 4 lety +5

    Been no-tilling for 20 plus years. After 3 or 4 years your soil will heal itself and miracles will happen. I will never till again.

  • @philiplogemann314
    @philiplogemann314 Před 7 lety +8

    I know some people think that getting less yields the first couple years into no till means it is not working. you need to keep at it build the organic matter up, know how to manage the weeds, insects and residue. Another thing with no-till is you don't spend money on fuel to work the ground, maintaining the equipment to work the ground (like sweeps and discs), yes you have to spend money on herbicides and insecticides but you will still have to spend some money on that even in conventional tillage. My dad made my grandpa who was adamant against it, switch, after 10 or so years he said he doesn't know why he didn't switch sooner and that he'd never go back, dad passed away twelve years ago and someone who tills took over, when they combined the fields left after he passed they said they had never seen such good yields from a no-till field, and because we did not spend money on the tillage we would stand to make more money per acre. we always finished planting before anyone else in our area as well because the ground was manged so well, we were never pressed by snow and cold to get fall tillage done, either.

  • @raurkegoose5233
    @raurkegoose5233 Před 7 lety +20

    What kind of cover crops do you use? What types of livestock graze those covers? Are they rotated frequently? Maybe some things to consider. You are losing topsoil, moisture, and nutrients by tilling.

  • @Wurzel-jy7oi
    @Wurzel-jy7oi Před 5 lety +18

    This gentleman is quite right,no-till will not work on his farm,he has already decided that from the start.

  • @farming4g
    @farming4g Před 7 lety +3

    Nice looking crops. You've got your operation figured out on what works best so far, and that's the way to do it. Like others have mentioned climate, soil type, regions, etc all affect which practices to use. As for us in NoDak, we used to have to till everything because of our drill setups. Since getting the no-till system it has out-produced our old practices, even after the first year using it surprisingly. Our lighter soils in the area have benefited from less soil disturbance.
    We still do some spot tillage here and there, either with fighting grasses, certain noxious weeds, some wet areas, controlled burns, etc..... and of course our Organic fields are all heavily tilled, but that's a completely different beast.

    • @jimmartindale
      @jimmartindale Před 6 lety

      I'm here in Nw ND and the CurseBuster has shown us great relief from sodium movement and accumulations. Much deeper and more prolific root systems too. Our sloughs are going to disappear with this tool. Sloughs have been growing and FHB has become more prevalent ever since no-tilling became so popular.

  • @DennysCountryLife
    @DennysCountryLife Před 7 lety +2

    Good looking stands brother! I look forward to seeing the end results!

  • @farmgrowncountrystrong
    @farmgrowncountrystrong Před 7 lety +3

    Yeah I think it depends on a lot of different factors. We do mainly minimum tillage, like just once over with a vertical tillage piece and it's usually ready to plant. We dairy farm, so sometimes we're also disking manure into the soil better before hitting it with the vertical tillage. We're also planning on no-tillling into a field that was in wheat last year and had some coming back that we just had sprayed. It varies a lot.

  • @pa.heifergrower67
    @pa.heifergrower67 Před 7 lety +2

    Nice crops ! ! You're doing a good job.

  • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
    @nonyadamnbusiness9887 Před 2 lety +2

    No till is hard on heavy clay because nutrients don't move much in clay. Strip till and cover crops would work and improve the ground over time. With strip till, you can run a tine and put the fertilizer down in the root zone where it's needed.

  • @farmermatt629
    @farmermatt629 Před 7 lety +3

    That soil looks like perfect candidate for strip till.... my strip till out yields my conventional every year... going to 100% strip till next year but then again I've been doing it for 20 years on several farms and no till the beans... I had 80 bushel no til beans last year and like I said strip till has been as high as 296bpa over last few years.... I highly believe that the less passes over field in spring the better year in year out... I run track tractors and have tracks on grain cart metric tires on combine... you have to make changes to make things work

  • @davesipsy7587
    @davesipsy7587 Před 6 lety +13

    When you say no-till won't work on your farm; you are right. If you were to say that no-till will work on your farm; you'd be right then, too. Because the limiting factor is not the soil, but the person controlling the decisions on the farm. Soil biology principles are not location specific. That's being proven year after year, in state after state, in tropical, subtropical and temperate regions.

  • @mooneym.3642
    @mooneym.3642 Před 11 měsíci

    You need cover crops for mulch, or chaff or layers of other stuff as mulch covering the top soil. Then you need mycorhizal fungus in it. Plant something with deep root system once after deep plowing, cotton for tropics. This will create room in the soil. Its a whole system and needs to be understood and implemented fully, not partially, to gain benefit. You can always keep supplementing with chemical fertilizers as well.

  • @Judi-Graff
    @Judi-Graff Před 7 lety +5

    Alfalfa looks great

  • @oe542
    @oe542 Před 4 lety +1

    Its simply amazing that the worlds millennial old great grass plains and rain forests are able to survive year to year without being mild boarded under.

  • @tedvoskuil2827
    @tedvoskuil2827 Před 5 lety +3

    He’s not just a farmer, he’s out standing in his field!

  • @Cherryfarmboy60
    @Cherryfarmboy60 Před 7 lety +2

    Very nice corn field and you are correct no till is not for everyone, we custom no till for guys and their a lot of farms locally that won't even try it, which I think no till is a learning experience, each year you have to get better otherwise your going to fall behind.

  • @SoybeanFarmer3300
    @SoybeanFarmer3300 Před 7 lety +3

    corn, alfalfa, and wheat all growing nicely and in the same video... impressive, now that is true farming with multiple crop types keeping the land in full year round growing season production. good job Farmer. someone recently said "farming is legalized gambling", I thought about that and decided the statement to be correct. so many things out of the scope of my control have to be right in order to produce a profitable crop. it can be a real heartbreak when the crop sell exceeds the actual cost of producing the crop and then have equipment breakdowns take away all the profits and some leaving the year at a negative. as a small acreage farmer there is never going to be enough profit to consider bank notes on newer equipment. as for renting more land, BTOs [Big Time Operators] in my area, have pushed the rent over 100 dollars an acre and I just can't see the math in that working. at my age I work with the equipment I have because it is paid for and I do not really think I have another 20 years left in me to spend farming in order to recover the cost of changing my current operation to a no-till program. I truly enjoy seeing the younger farmers here on You Tube who have been able to start up their operations with nice equipment and high-tech techniques creating an increased efficiency. I wish for them all the best and many years enjoying the thrills of success in their operations. - Soybean Farmer -

    • @muddysprings6233
      @muddysprings6233 Před 7 lety

      Soybean Farmer they are pushing land rent around here above $400 an acre!

  • @johngourley741
    @johngourley741 Před 7 lety +2

    it is hard to get the heavier soil warmed up and dry in the spring in Pa. The high population will take a lot of water. Hope it is not a dry year.

  • @PAFarms
    @PAFarms Před 7 lety +3

    I'm told that no-till is a process. You have to subsoil to breakup the plow pan, then it takes 3-5 years until you reap the benefit. I just switched this year. But my soil is red shale so it's less compacted. Good video!

    • @Jns27j
      @Jns27j Před 6 lety

      Don't take advice from Penn State. You do not need to sub soil. Do it right you will never look back. I farm 800 acres in Bradford co and I till less the 20 acres a year.

    • @PAFarms
      @PAFarms Před 6 lety +1

      Jns27j Do you do anything with cover crops? I can't really subsoil if I wanted to. It's just too rocky.

    • @warrencorcoran9824
      @warrencorcoran9824 Před 6 lety

      there's a tow behind called Massano, you can find it on u tube, rock burring attachment, incredible tool, bury rocks down 24 inches, rototill compost corn stalks, any vegetable matter, manures, etc., aka trash into soil, great for water retention, crops grow like weeds. plant hay, rototill into soil before planting following year, aka green manure

    • @codysdadone
      @codysdadone Před 6 lety

      The reason that you have a pan is because you are killing natures tillers, earthworms, with all of your tilling. No-till ground has no pan.

  • @allancundiff8027
    @allancundiff8027 Před 7 lety +2

    that is a great stand you have

  • @69druth
    @69druth Před 7 lety +2

    Not much no-till corn in my area. Vertical or a cultivator is used on wheat or bean stubble before hand. I no-till everything but corn. It can be stoney in areas up here in Ontario. You are blessed with some pretty good dirt in your area and that's half the battle. You have a good min-till program and that will work year after year. You get 160 plus corn there is a lot of stalk that has to be dealt with by chopping or tillage. 120 bus corn will not pay at these prices. As you say have a good day.

  • @Applerockdairy
    @Applerockdairy Před 7 lety +3

    I live in Maryland and you planted before guys around here did. We've had more rain then you have and corn around here that is up looks a little on the yellow side

  • @Philm88
    @Philm88 Před 7 lety +2

    sorry I should watch your video completely befor commenting. do you spray a fungicide at flowering on your wheat?

  • @willmcdonald1499
    @willmcdonald1499 Před 7 lety +2

    We use a molboard plough in the fall then do 2 or 3 passes in the spring with the cultivator and our corn is always better that way

    • @marcelpick2972
      @marcelpick2972 Před 7 lety +2

      Sorry man, watching your vidios is like watching grass grow.
      You need to get some help making your vidios.

  • @donald1056
    @donald1056 Před 7 lety +2

    Nice looking field

  • @Strick_07
    @Strick_07 Před 7 lety +5

    Have you ever tried strip till with corn?

  • @TeezleySPT
    @TeezleySPT Před 7 lety +12

    If you think that's a slope you need to come to Tennessee. If we didn't no till we would have more waterways than crop ground.

    • @Dollapfin
      @Dollapfin Před 7 lety +1

      TeezleySPT yeah I think he doesn't get it. No till increases drainage when done properly. Turn that residue into green chop and you don't have wet soil. Lay it down and you do.

  • @ericvermeulen9853
    @ericvermeulen9853 Před 8 měsíci

    You are a young farmer that knows nothing you are absolutely right 😆😆

  • @nailwall1078
    @nailwall1078 Před rokem

    50 /50 I'll do it nothing less. I'll provide additional funding and free equity more than farms worth

  • @Philm88
    @Philm88 Před 7 lety +2

    nice stand what nitrogen source do you use?

  • @PeterIJmker
    @PeterIJmker Před 7 lety +1

    Always fertilize the soil well. Test the soil every year and adjust your fertilizer accordingly. Better fertilize more and prefer to apply a lot of organic manure works best.

  • @codysdadone
    @codysdadone Před 6 lety +1

    If no till will work on ridge tops in the Ozarks it will work anywhere. Trying it one year is not adequate to say it will not work on your farm. It takes several years of winter cover crops and no-tilling to see whether it will work for you or not. You need to contact Dr. Grant Woods about their system where they grow soybeans and have not added chemical fertilizers for over 4 years. Tilling causes damage to your soil and kills earthworms and microbes that are essential for good soil health.

  • @actorzone856
    @actorzone856 Před 6 lety +1

    less till is better for the soil, here vegetable farmers use the mouldboard plough and what happens is the crop grows well in the first year after that you pay the price, like chemicals which no longer work as farmers plant to suit weed growth, its all about soil management, crop rotation, sowing green crops to have healthy soil with organisms doing their work, a lot of farmers have lost the plot due to having to make a dollar, remember the US dustbowl which was caused by?

  • @PeterIJmker
    @PeterIJmker Před 7 lety +2

    What would be the benefit of no-till. It seems nothing to me. The Netherlands always plows, although sometimes cultivation is sometimes applied

  • @CHARLESBW453
    @CHARLESBW453 Před 5 lety

    I have a question how much do you make off each acre after fuel labor and everything else for that one acre per year

  • @TheWizardGamez
    @TheWizardGamez Před 3 lety +2

    compare your soil, to nearby pastureland. also, no-till is a multi-year effort. that's like trying to learn to be a surgeon in a year and then being mad that your not as good as those who have done in for years.

  • @stanhensley3082
    @stanhensley3082 Před 7 lety +3

    Every soil type is different.Every farmer is different.Every seed type is different.What a farmer has to do is to know what works for their farm then do it. Yes you have to watch what is new or different but in the end it your farm and you get to do what best on your farm.Great looking crops on your farm,your hard work can be seen in your crops and livestock.

  • @TwoHappyChildrenFarm
    @TwoHappyChildrenFarm Před 7 lety +2

    You sure beat my no till stand. It feels good to have corn up when others are still planting. I was sidedressing when the others were planting. It would help if you used GDUs to track the crop for those of us in weird parts of the world. Agphd has a nice phone app. I saw no till emerge at 180 gdus rather than 120 you see in conventional till. Here our CEC is around 35 with OM in 1.8% range. It's heavy soil that needs OM build up. Keep doing what's working. I think early planting is step #1.

  • @K3Flyguy
    @K3Flyguy Před 2 lety

    Some ground is simply unfit to use as farm ground. The only reason that type of ground continues to be farmed is due to government subsidies. The majority of non farmers have no idea of the vast amount of money the government puts into farming. There is no excuse for poor farming practices to continue in this day and age. I firmly believe there should be up to date mandated protocols for farming practices that vary with the soil type and farm location. If the farmer does not follow the mandates then he should not be eligible for subsidiaries.

  • @erichufnagel3474
    @erichufnagel3474 Před rokem

    Have you tried applying compost extracts and mixes of womcastimgs, Biochar, milk, and molasses to your soils and crops? You can’t expect no till to produce great results while still applying chemical products to it. There’s a process happening in our soils that you can’t keep treating with antibiotics. No-till works when applied correctly. There’s more to it than rotating crops. Grazing correctly at the proper times is key also.
    It will work in any soil. 1 year is not going to replenish a sterilized environment with the right microbes especially if you’re spraying chemicals and synthetic fertilizers. Yields don’t mean squat when you’re pumping high cost inputs into your crops, there’s a more profitable way to farm without burning the diesel and spending loads on products. Soil care and management is what farmers are responsible for and Americans are falling behind the rest of the world as far as sustainability goes. We have to learn these new practices if we want lasting topsoil

  • @dalecook4928
    @dalecook4928 Před 2 lety

    Where is your farm located?
    Thanks!

  • @farmingforfunandprofit940

    Definately a pretty stand....I would expect it to be taller,But your northern climate is probably causing the slow growth....The corn that my neighbor planted 4/16 17 is already 40 inches tall, but he will have to deal with super heat in June and July... He will be going full speed to get his drip system going....

  • @kentuckyfarmer1129
    @kentuckyfarmer1129 Před 7 lety +2

    what type of nitrogen do guys use.

  • @Thomas-sv6jr
    @Thomas-sv6jr Před 5 lety

    How much top soil do you gain or lose? Or organic matter is lost out of the soil? That's the question as I understand it, will your beautiful ag land still be beautiful ag land 20, 50, 100, etc years from now. I think production numbers are not the primary metric for what no till is trying to accomplish. In Wichita, 20 min after I wash my car it's dusty, which along with pollen is probably top soil going bye bye.

  • @jimmartindale
    @jimmartindale Před 6 lety +2

    some really great comments and very important reminders about the limitations of no-tilling soils. I hope you all go visit www.soilcursebuster.com. read thru some of the pdf's of PPT talks and see why no-till doesn't work everywhere and in fact in more places than where it does. It is about silt movement and occlusion of the soil macropores which result in poor percolation of water and poor gas exchange. Using "targeted tillage" which does not destroy the efforts of root systems and biological communities to build aggregate stability is the key. Write from the website for a free DVD which shows what can be achieved with this approach to tillage.

  • @silvershark2843
    @silvershark2843 Před 7 lety +3

    I have been farming since 1962 and vie tried both ways. its just a little more work. and time but I will get my money back for tilling

  • @Rogue.Warrior
    @Rogue.Warrior Před 5 lety

    You need to use wood chips. Check out Paul Gautschi's Back to Eden gardening method.

  • @klugfarmsklug9323
    @klugfarmsklug9323 Před 6 lety +1

    No till will work every where. I don't do it but. Continuous corn needs tilling. His field looks like it had soybeans last year / trash evidence on the ground. I think planting a cover crop is a waste of time & money. Lets say you get it planted early Oct.. it will emerge a couple inches is all. Cold temps & freezes limit it's Fall growth. Then in Spring, SEMN, you like to be done corn planting at the end of April, covered crop destroyed by then. It may have green up in the Spring is all, what's the benefit???

  • @w056007568
    @w056007568 Před 7 lety

    As an interested observer of these distinctively different alternative methods of farming, mostly combinable, crops. I think both sides of the discussion are broadly correct if only because there has always been "horses for courses". There is little doubt in my mind that achieving a successful and profitable crop is a multi-factorial business, otherwise surely everyone would follow the same plan to obtain good results and we all know that doesn't work because, not least of all, we do not experience the same weather and weather patterns everywhere.
    To try to contribute usefully to this discussion I would make the following relevant point which can perhaps be summed up in the following phrase "If you haven't spent it (£/$) you haven't got to earn it". It seems to me that a great deal of time and money is being spent (time, fuel, wearing parts, breakdowns etc.) preparing seedbeds to plant crops into, sometimes to excess. I also think that with farms becoming ever larger, more specialised and spread out geographically together with skilled labour becoming scarce this means that this seedbed production is often being "forced" (more passes, bigger heavier equipment, working soils before they are dry enough, etc) and perhaps producing less than ideal results as well. Timeliness has also suffered in my opinion as well which in turn has had an impact on crop performance.
    I also don't think ultra high yields is absolutely everything to be looking for. Clearly a satisfactory yield together with a reasonable sale price obviously matters to everyone as all farms have overhead costs to meet (eg rent, power costs, depreciation costs, etc, etc.) as well as the direct costs attributable to growing any particular crop. However if a method of planting crops such as no till for some types of crops offers for some an opportunity to grow crops more profitably due to reduced costs then it demands serious consideration and investigation.
    Clearly some soils are much more naturally fertile than others, some are more akin to trying to farm a sandy beach whist others are more like a clay brick pit! Some land has such a dry climate and little in the way of rainfall when its is actually needed that is almost desert-like from the point of view of growing crops whilst other areas are just the reverse. Obviously also things like topography, aspect and many other soil factors have a huge bearing on the issue
    However it does neither side of this discussion any credit whatsoever to emphatically condemn the other side's point of view and experience and is totally negative and not welcome.

  • @Farmable
    @Farmable Před 7 lety +4

    I agree with your practices completely

  • @calebbisson4577
    @calebbisson4577 Před 7 lety +3

    we have washouts in our no till corn fields even with our cover crop

    • @TwoHappyChildrenFarm
      @TwoHappyChildrenFarm Před 7 lety +1

      Us too.

    • @Dollapfin
      @Dollapfin Před 7 lety +1

      Caleb Bisson that literally makes no sense what is the seeding rate of your mixes and monocrop covers

    • @Dollapfin
      @Dollapfin Před 7 lety

      Caleb Bisson oh and I know I've gotten so much rain lately covers just handle it. Five inches a week every other week. Just started heating up.

  • @dairsensi
    @dairsensi Před 6 lety

    You can't honestly expect no-till to work after 1 year. To get the benefits, it will take years. Not because it does not work, because it takes time for your soils to repair all the damage from years of tilling. Using multi-species cover crops and always having something in the soil will do wonders for your land. Those other guys might be getting slightly smaller yields than you, but you are probably spending more money on fertilizer and other chemicals. Not to mention time/labor. Look up Dave Brant.

  • @levilowder2624
    @levilowder2624 Před 4 lety +2

    Your corn looks great but your soil looks dead. If you like spending lots of money on inputs, crusted/compacted soil and leached/lost fertilizer then continue by all means. If you had an open mind to continue with no-till and cover crops you might be able to farm profitably one day. Good luck with tillage, crusty soils and wasted fertility.

  • @chargermopar
    @chargermopar Před 7 lety +2

    No till is a bad idea if you are using herbicides which destroy the soil bacteria that fix nitrogen.

    • @jaaaaaaarocks
      @jaaaaaaarocks Před 7 lety +1

      Tillage destroys soil structure and also breaks down organic matter and disrupts the soil biology.

    • @chargermopar
      @chargermopar Před 7 lety

      That's why I prefer no till without Roundup. It gives me an excuse to fire up the dozer and pull the roller chopper around. In 20 years you would be amazed the difference it has made here.

    • @Jns27j
      @Jns27j Před 6 lety

      Ok. You just proved how little you know. Nitrogen is only fixed through bacteria infection on root nodules. Only legume roots can be infected. Tillage destroys the soil structure and destroys earthworm pops. You have to have earthworms if you want free fertilizer from your organic material.

    • @danlakey8074
      @danlakey8074 Před 6 lety

      Jns27j nitrogen fixation can be done both by rhizobium bacteria on roots of legumes but there are also free living nitrogen fixing bacteria called associative diazatrophs that will fix up to 80 lbs N per year for corn, wheat, etc. Tillage stimulates copiotrophic bacteria that mineralize and make nutrients available but consume carbon sources to do so (soil cannibalizes itself). Tillage also destroys mycorhizeal fungi hyphea that can bring water, phos, and other nutrients to your plant.

    • @danlakey8074
      @danlakey8074 Před 6 lety

      It's the lesser of two evils approach...tillage decimates biology but glyphosate is also a biocide. I don't care about organic but organic no till with constant ground cover and a living root in the ground at all times with livestock in the rotation would be about as good as an environment for biology as one could achieve

  • @gutersteinker
    @gutersteinker Před 5 lety

    What bout' row till?

  • @outoftownr3906
    @outoftownr3906 Před 3 lety

    It’s always impossible till it’s done.
    No till is a journey not a destination.

  • @jakeziegler599
    @jakeziegler599 Před 7 lety +5

    No till is a regional thing. What ever works on ones soil. As long as one can control weeds I have no problem with no till. Seen a few guys just let weeds go but that's a whole other tangent lol. Guys we're doin no till beans in our area but weed resistance is gettin so bad guys had to switch back to tillage. U ot to try strip till I think u would be happy with it. What is ur average corn yield over the whole farm?

    • @Dollapfin
      @Dollapfin Před 7 lety

      Jake Ziegler question what have you seen weeds do? Do we have definitive yield loss numbers because from what I see it's not worth buying herbicide or tilling just to get rid of a few weeds that stand no chance of beating a crop like wheat or corn.

    • @walkingmonument
      @walkingmonument Před 6 lety

      If weeds are out of control, you're doing something wrong

  • @DrCorvid
    @DrCorvid Před 6 lety

    No-till agriculture may not bring hoped-for boost in global crop yields
    In October 2014 a study done in University of California - Davis summarized that no-till farming appears to hold promise for boosting crop yields only in dry regions, not in the cool, moist areas of the world.
    www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/10/141023100727.htm
    Studies have repeatedly found that no-till farming alone can reduce yields. No till garlic for example experienced a 32-44% bulb loss (Bratsch et al. 2005). In a meta-analysis of more than 5000 paired yield observations from field trials around the world, in regions with moist climates and sufficient precipitation, no-till farming reduced yields by 6 to 9 percent compared to conventional tillage (5.7% Pittelkow et. al.) No-till alone reduced crop yields by 9.9%. Together with crop rotation and residue retention, no-till lowered yields by 2.5%.
    environmentalresearchweb.org/cws/article/news/59037
    doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2015.07.020
    In a global meta-analysis of no-till relative to conventional tillage yields using 678 studies, no-till reduced yields by 5.1% across 50 crops and 6005 paired observations, no-till performed best under rainfed conditions in dry climates, matching conventional tillage yields on average, and when used in combination with the other two conservation measures of crop rotation and residue retention, as much as 7.3% higher yield could be seen over conventional farming.

  • @wesleycallison2079
    @wesleycallison2079 Před 3 lety

    Yield ignores cost. Cost cancels yield.

  • @ryanmiller7652
    @ryanmiller7652 Před 6 lety +1

    Oh God it’s another recreational tillage master

  • @ontariocashcropfarmer4955
    @ontariocashcropfarmer4955 Před 7 lety +13

    Hey just do what works for you ! that's what I do crop looks good farmer 👍

  • @kitt080863
    @kitt080863 Před 6 lety

    Of course it works on you land it works on all land, but it takes more than one season.

  • @Philm88
    @Philm88 Před 7 lety +2

    did you say a hundred bushel less???

    • @Philm88
      @Philm88 Před 7 lety +1

      That seems like a stretch but if slugs are bad in the area I can believe it

  • @floydfarms1578
    @floydfarms1578 Před 7 lety +2

    No till has advantages and disadvantages, it doesn't fit with everyone's land. Gotta do what works for you!

  • @wcm68tn
    @wcm68tn Před rokem +1

    "We tried to till one year..." 😖

  • @rishabhsen84
    @rishabhsen84 Před 4 lety

    Use native seeds in small area and than decide.

  • @jrbpa5775
    @jrbpa5775 Před 7 lety +2

    I think every farmer should try different methods of tilling ground. I see soybeans planted in corn stubble so thick its still there when they combine the beans. Corn stubble dust coming out the back of the combine. Sometimes I think no till is a way to hurry up and get done planting crops. Not necessarily done right but just done. There are good farmers and poor farmers, those that care about the ground and taking care of it and those that only are after the money. No till isn't for everyone.

  • @stevebyrd4925
    @stevebyrd4925 Před 4 lety +4

    He sounds pretty closed minded.He will not be in business in years to come.This guy is kidding his self to think he tried no till .

  • @STEVENRAY18
    @STEVENRAY18 Před 7 lety

    As long as you're sure and you've got your mind made up that that is the only way you can do it there by God you stick with it and stop by the nurse to the world with it

  • @Dollapfin
    @Dollapfin Před 6 lety +9

    They were probably just not doing it right. Simple fact is you CANNOT improve your soil if you destroy it annually.

  • @mattwilkinson8502
    @mattwilkinson8502 Před 7 lety +2

    the only reason I ever no-tilled was we have some ground that is sandy and it will blow in the spring. on our heavy ground we always tilled

  • @Democraticcivilization

    No tillage is about mulching and exchanging bacteria from crop to crop if you need to see perfect view of the field you can't do it

  • @leelindsay5618
    @leelindsay5618 Před 4 lety

    Watch Ray Archuleta & if you can sit through his whole demonstration with the rain machine, slake test, and porocity test and not see anything convincing, I wouldn't recommend anyone argue with you.

  • @downbntout
    @downbntout Před 5 lety

    Please see the YT video "Undercover Farming". I'd like to hear your thoughts, if you would

  • @brandonmusser3119
    @brandonmusser3119 Před 4 lety

    Okay show me the end product there it is

  • @robertwaters2772
    @robertwaters2772 Před 4 lety

    Hi i am form NewZealand looking at yourfarm you have no soil structure ground is compacted cracked it Will dry out very soon you spend far to much money on synthetic everything i think you Will end up with more money in your pocket if you change the way you think ie getting the soil structure working and stop killing it i think you needhelp in this field good luck Robbie

  • @EZ570
    @EZ570 Před 6 lety +1

    Try interseeding crimson clover, vetch, and peas for a cover crop.

  • @brandonmusser3119
    @brandonmusser3119 Před 4 lety

    Why don't you just plant a few crops next to your corn my help out

  • @peterclark6290
    @peterclark6290 Před 2 lety

    Why wouldn't it work on your spread? Just saying it repetitively isn't an argument. The ultimate goal is to adopt Regenerative Agriculture practices as a package and 'no till' is just one element of that process; it involves heaps more and maybe you should look for more of the other benefits which will improve your bottom line. E.g., Dr Johnson gets exceptional yields (better than forests) but he's a highly-trained Scientist with all the bells and whistles.

  • @banditfarmer1900
    @banditfarmer1900 Před 6 lety +3

    I have worked ground all my life and have given No-Till a good try from 2013 till now and can tell you like you no-till just don't work in my ground at all. If you go 5 miles east of us no-till works every year no problems but ours it just don't work. All the big guys run turbo tills 3 or 4 passes over the field before they plant so there not no-tilling. No-Till works in some ground and others it don't work at all, And it don't work for me ! Bandit

    • @elmcustomharvesting1072
      @elmcustomharvesting1072 Před 6 lety +1

      Bandit farmer I totally agree with you there's some guys give me a hard time but the yields we get off this Farm outweigh the cost of working it. Thanks for the comment and have a great evening

    • @banditfarmer1900
      @banditfarmer1900 Před 6 lety +1

      I've come to believe that no-till weather it works or not all depends on the soil type, In any ground that if you work it wet it turn to concrete no-till is not going to work unless conditions are perfect and who has perfect ground to plant ? You got to know your soils and what works and what don't and remember that every year. It never hurts to try something new if you think it stands a chance of working , You never know until you try. But when you try and it don't work (several years) then you can say you gave it an honest try and go back to what you know works for sure. That's the great thing about farming, Its always changing ! Bandit

    • @warrencorcoran9824
      @warrencorcoran9824 Před 6 lety

      well said there Bandit, I posted above, I think you might like reading it, not about how, when, why to or not to till,, hahaha its about yields, I get incredible ones, a couple posts above,, have a great year, let me know what you think,, took a life to learn what I know. Snooka

  • @halsteward1003
    @halsteward1003 Před 6 lety +1

    Cover crops ? Break up your dirt maybe.

  • @5er593
    @5er593 Před 4 lety

    Then strip till wil work

  • @davehalser9351
    @davehalser9351 Před 6 lety

    im calling bullshit on the 100 bushels difference.. No tlil works with time.

  • @johnesmith2365
    @johnesmith2365 Před 6 lety

    I have been studying no till, one year is not enough. is your corn roundup ready? roundup is killing the digestive system of every American. by increasing the candida in our gut. notill seems to be the way to to eliminate weed killer down the road.

    • @vtecmissle
      @vtecmissle Před 5 lety

      round up is exclusively used on no till land to kill the cover off and weeds. Just to let you know.

  • @roysimmons9806
    @roysimmons9806 Před 4 lety

    There is a difference between what some people call no till and never till. One year is not no till.

    • @connornolan3626
      @connornolan3626 Před 4 lety

      Roy Simmons This guy is a total clown 😂 I’m glad someone can see this!

    • @roysimmons9806
      @roysimmons9806 Před 4 lety

      @@connornolan3626 I have been no till for 30 years. TRUTH if I had to go back to plowing, I would quit and sow it down in pasture or plant pines.

  • @sassymassey5002
    @sassymassey5002 Před 3 lety

    Doesnt work in my area ether

  • @yohjokromwood2327
    @yohjokromwood2327 Před 6 lety

    get chicken to fertilzer your soil

  • @arthurarns4620
    @arthurarns4620 Před 6 lety

    That is not Notill!!

  • @jimrobertson9865
    @jimrobertson9865 Před 7 lety

    you not got any barely straw in

  • @silvershark2843
    @silvershark2843 Před 7 lety +3

    I agree with you on no till vs tilling. Alto of farmers just want to save time and fuel

  • @Jns27j
    @Jns27j Před 6 lety +2

    Your right about ground temps and bugs but your missing the big picture. And I'm sure your no-till neighbors are not yielding a 100 bu less. That doesn't even make sense. Also corn out of ground in 4 days??? How shallow are you planting??? I farm on ground 1,500' elevation with CEC's in the 4-8 range north of I 80 right I 86 and I'll tell no-till works. With that said I do think their is place for tillage. When you fill your creating massive amounts of erosion, OM degradation and the destruction of beneficial insects.

  • @jeffb6276
    @jeffb6276 Před 5 lety

    I came just to hear what you had to say.. the other side of the coin. You need to take 2.5 hrs and watch Gabe Brown talk (type gabe Brown in CZcams and you'll see the one 2.5 hr video). You are completely missing the point and for the sake of your farms future and the people you feed you should take the time and watch it. Please.

  • @Indiana2door
    @Indiana2door Před 6 lety +1

    No tillage will work anywhere.

  • @MyBinaryLife
    @MyBinaryLife Před 6 lety +1

    Seems you don't understand what the point of no till is.

  • @FreeRange1234
    @FreeRange1234 Před 6 lety

    You need to watch Gabe Browns videos, You are making excuses, no till will work anywhere, you just need to educate yourself about how to do it. There is much more you need to know besides just no-till, there are cover crops to consider. Yes you might get less per acre yield wise but if you are doing it right your inputs are drastically cut and you will be more profitable and you are not killing the land.

  • @jimmyjohnson7041
    @jimmyjohnson7041 Před rokem

    A lot of trash ? I see none. You never did state why no till doesnt work for you / on your land ????

  • @HomeShowTV
    @HomeShowTV Před 5 lety

    I would never tell a man something about his own land or soil. The OP knows what he is dealing with. Just as a matter of logic and language, however, the statement "No-till won't work here" is hugely unsupportable. "No-till" is a developing agri-science in its infancy. New developments are deepening our understanding of the carbon cycle every year. Saying that No-Till won't work here makes about as much sense as saying that "all cars have titanium wheels" because a Bonneville speed car is the only vehicle you have ever seen. It may be perfectly reasonable to say that the no-till practices you have tried, or that those in your area have employed, are inferior to conventional tillage in the short run. Anything more is really quite silly.

  • @nailwall1078
    @nailwall1078 Před rokem

    I keep hearing no till dont work this dudes str8 smoking I can tell you why no tills not working are you cover cropping with hydro nutrients

  • @rickymccutcheon
    @rickymccutcheon Před 7 lety +4

    Crops look really good , no till does not work for every one in every situation , so for some to get on here and tell u that u r doing it wrong shows what idiots they are, just my thoughts.