There isn’t a ton of products out there that are approved to use. Manure would be the main one I didn’t know if that’s what they used or if they used something else
@@derekthomas1550 You just have to buy "Certified" Urea or the best way is to do a good crop rotation with a legume like Soybeans or Alfalfa to fix N in the soil. Its really no different then the way guys farmed 50+ years ago... its just nowadays some guys take the easy way out and spray everything and then their done till harvest.
Good luck combining your oats
Thank you!
160-170. Varies throughout the field. Anything above 100 is good.
Awesome looking crop of oats boys!! 👍🏽
Oh yeah!
Beautiful pictures!!!!
Thanks grandpa!
Video idea: Follow the grain from the field to the bin site.
Good video!! 👍 👍 📸 📷
Great video
Thanks!
I respect his work, he always delivers quality content
I would like to see you running 60 foot Honeybee headers on your combines.
I am not affiliated with Honeybee in any way.
Nice drone footage! Did u take the 'drone flying: 101' class at Iowa State University, taught by Taylor swift?!
Wouldn’t of that been sweet!
What was the yield? Could not unterstand it
150/bushel Avg
@@crandonborth That is nearly 11ton per hectare if im right. That is way better den the conventional yield in germany
Are you drying with heat, or just with air?
How clean are the oats?
Depends on how wet out of field, most will be ran through a dryer but if they are dry enough they will go straight into a bin and be air dried
👌👌
What do you guys use for your main source of nitrogen on corn?
I mean you can still buy fertilzer if you are organic... it just has to be certified organic fert.
@@crandonborth exactly that’s what I’m asking
There isn’t a ton of products out there that are approved to use. Manure would be the main one I didn’t know if that’s what they used or if they used something else
@@derekthomas1550 You just have to buy "Certified" Urea or the best way is to do a good crop rotation with a legume like Soybeans or Alfalfa to fix N in the soil. Its really no different then the way guys farmed 50+ years ago... its just nowadays some guys take the easy way out and spray everything and then their done till harvest.
We use pig manure and chicken litter for our nitrogen, we spread in the fall and then work it in. We apply about 200 lbs of N per acre!