Disc the Buckwheat at the Valley

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2013
  • Buckwheat is grown as a cover crop for a month, having been planted Jul24, and now being turned into the soil on Aug29. This is a field in the Valley Farm area of Jones Family Farms, in Shelton, CT.

Komentáře • 65

  • @anthonygasbarro3586
    @anthonygasbarro3586 Před 11 lety +3

    What a great video. Our family loves seeing the different posts and updates that you post. It helps us feel part of the farm. And what a great farm to be a part of!
    Keep up the great work.

  • @groundcontrol6876
    @groundcontrol6876 Před rokem

    Wow, this is amazing! What a great, extremely useful tool! Imagine having to do all that by hand (like I'd have to lol). Would take forever.

  • @krisoluich9119
    @krisoluich9119 Před 9 lety +4

    Nice Carbon content and tilth to that soil. Follow that with tillage radish and you can farm until Kingdom come. That's what I do after planting and harvesting oats. As the video shows, the buckwheat's ready in about 30 days. Plenty of time to get the radishes in. Keep up the good work. Nice to see father and son together too.

  • @djlondon7956
    @djlondon7956 Před 3 lety

    Buckwheat is absolutely delicious to eat, you cook it like a rice... With stock and veggies and meat if you want to... I've only just started to use it myself and I wish I had known about it earlier on in life it's so convenient and delicious

  • @manuelcobosescobedo5241

    Muy buen trabajo, con 2 pasadas quedará lista la tierra para la siembra

  • @sandroshanidze6060
    @sandroshanidze6060 Před 4 lety

    Just Beautiful!
    How long and what preparations before the next crop after buckwheat?
    Do you make make any other changes, say rotary till, or is do you sow the next crop in this residue?

  • @bretthovey5634
    @bretthovey5634 Před 6 lety +1

    It would help if you had scolloped discs on the front gang it would crop the plant much better :) Have proven this by experience.

  • @JonesFamilyFarms
    @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 10 lety

    Craig Cramer , the cover crop was planted Jul24, following the spring crop via a broadcast spreader. It was a good growing year in 2013.

    • @13Dare13
      @13Dare13 Před 4 lety

      So I understand your planting strawberries after the buckwheat. Did this field have strawberries before the buckwheat as well or wouldn’t that be considered enough rotation? Strawberries~buckwheat~strawberries. Appreciate your videos.

  • @vakimsong9291
    @vakimsong9291 Před 6 lety

    How can I find buckwheat crop?

  • @nirmantapaswee6853
    @nirmantapaswee6853 Před 6 lety

    what ie he doing?

  • @cdcramer42
    @cdcramer42 Před 10 lety +1

    When, how was this cover crop established? Following spring crops? Broadcast? Drilled?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety +1

      Yes after a crop was harvested. Seed was drilled.

    • @Dougarrowhead
      @Dougarrowhead Před 4 lety +1

      @@JonesFamilyFarms you told another commenter it was broadcast.

  • @jamisgood21
    @jamisgood21 Před 6 lety +2

    Awesome! I may try buckwheat at some time for cover. Did a peas and oats mix this year. So now what's the plan here after disking this in? Winter wheat drilled?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 5 lety +4

      Well, keep in mind this video was from 2013. It was planted with strawberries in 2014, with their first harvest in 2015 June. We have harvested the strawberries their in June of 2016, 2017 and 2018 (we don't tear up strawberries after a single season). Depending upon the yield next summer, evaluation will determine our plans for rotating to the next crop, which may be pumpkins, or sorghum grass, or buckwheat again. The key is rotating crop, and following our farm credo that has served us since the mid 1800s on this farm: "Be Good To The Land, And The Land Will Be Good To You". Still amazed at how this video still resonates with people 5yrs later. Good luck with your future buckwheat plantings Ben.

    • @jamisgood21
      @jamisgood21 Před 5 lety +1

      I agree fully with your farming motto. Thanks! Best to you all.

  • @emmaziegler6647
    @emmaziegler6647 Před 7 lety

    Amazing crop if i heard right when he. Said it was only planted 4 weeks ago

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety

      Correct. About 4 weeks prior. It is apx 30 days from planting to harvest. (note the video is from some time ago)

  • @jasonmcmillan6598
    @jasonmcmillan6598 Před 7 lety

    do you guys put bees out while the BW is growing?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety +1

      We have a diverse mix of pollinator crops, and we rotate such activities among our fields. Yes we do have a bee keeper who tends to hives on the farm. We sell the honey in our Winery's Tasting Room.

  • @srinivasanpadmanabhan1811

    how long do you need to grow them if you want to harvest the buck wheat grains? Thanks

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 5 lety +1

      Our interest is not as a harvest crop, but rather an intermediate cover crop that returns nutrients into the soil, prior to planting the next crop. Crop rotation is important to us. This field was planted with strawberries during the following summer.

  • @chariddawn6663
    @chariddawn6663 Před 6 lety

    I have 3 acres of pasture that I want to plant buckwheat in for the honey bees. It has never been plowed or planted in. I also do not have a tractor but was going to pay someone. He has a disc and plow but doesn't use them or know how to plant buckwheat and I do not know what to tell him because I do not know either. Do I need to clear the pasture first? Disc it first or will plowing alone work? I honestly do not know the difference and Google uses words I don't understand, drilling, broadcasting. No clue. I just need buckwheat soon. Can you advise me?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 6 lety

      We are not beginning with pasture, as we are rotating crops. Since we are dealing with typically a harvested pumpkin crop, we disc the organic matter into the soil. We broadcast buckwheat seed and disc that in. If starting with a pasture that has a grass with a mass of roots - plowing might be an initial course of action? We also do our disc work in the late afternoon or early evening when the bees are typically not pollinating.

  • @nolebloodedfarmer7445
    @nolebloodedfarmer7445 Před 2 lety

    I get why you would turn it but why not harvest and then turn it?

  • @craigsmith441
    @craigsmith441 Před 7 lety

    How do you stop erosion if you disc it under/

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety

      Another cover crop is planted almost immediately after the disc activity. All field work is done with an eye toward the weather.

  • @GD15555
    @GD15555 Před 2 lety +1

    Sadly most people in the USA don’t even know what it is.

  • @codydog1700
    @codydog1700 Před 3 lety

    Where is this at? What rate was this planted at?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 3 lety

      This is at our Valley Farm location in Shelton, CT. USA. The video is from many years ago, so I do not know at what rate the seed was planted.

  • @sbdododo12
    @sbdododo12 Před 3 lety

    how many days need to harvest seeds after planting ?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 3 lety

      We do not harvest the buckwheat in this video from years ago, rather we use it as a cover crop to bring nutrients back into the soils. - Farmer Tom.

  • @savyoyster2829
    @savyoyster2829 Před 4 lety

    Didnt realize how close you guys are to me

  • @Dougarrowhead
    @Dougarrowhead Před 4 lety

    Why do you disk so slow?

  • @TrollMediaGroup
    @TrollMediaGroup Před 8 lety +13

    all that good honey being tilled into the ground

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 8 lety +8

      +Jen And ED (TheBeeKeeper) We do have beehives on the farm, and the subsequent crop in this field was strawberries planted in 2014, with their first harvest in 2015 June. The strawberry plants will produce for several seasons before the next rotation of crops occurs. Be it the cover crop of buckwheat, strawberries or pumpkins - there is plenty to keep our bees busy!

    • @sandroshanidze6060
      @sandroshanidze6060 Před 4 lety

      @@JonesFamilyFarms I've read you can terminate the buckwheat cover when its in the milk-wax ripening stage, have you done this? To first benefit from nectar for the bees and then the biomass for the soil? :)

  • @rk7567
    @rk7567 Před 9 lety +1

    you mind if i come stick some bees on that next year?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety

      We have a local beekeeper. Watch our website for upcoming info on that!

  • @phishlipsable
    @phishlipsable Před 6 lety

    WOW i aspire to farm @ a scale like this. i learned once how setting the gangs accomplished different jobs, and i hope to experiment with an implement like this. also all these haters not lovin the cover crop- what are you hoping to try and experiment with this year?

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 5 lety

      Sorry for tardy reply - it's outdoor farming season! One cover crop that works well for us is sorghum sudangrass. Of course, there is ALWAYS the practice of rotating the crop.

  • @ArthurHau
    @ArthurHau Před 10 lety +5

    I suppose cutting them down without tilling them into the soil is better cause they will serve as a good ground cover to avoid the soil getting too dry. Plus, there have been research studies suggesting that tilling will disrupt the soil ecology by killing worms and lots of micro-organisms that are beneficial to the soil. Plus plus, leaving the plants on the ground without tilling will avoid the compacting of the soil. In the long run, a no till piece of land is gonna be more productive than a piece of land that is tilled over and over every year. My 2 cents.

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety +1

      As an update: the disc activity was done in 2013. Strawberries were planted in the field in 2014. Strawberries had their first harvest in 2015, and second harvest in 2016. Soil compaction is a very large consideration on our farm where "Be Good To The Land And The Land Will Be Good To You" has been our motto since the mid 1800s

    • @dexter1155
      @dexter1155 Před 6 lety +1

      r steevens so herbicides are better?

    • @dexter1155
      @dexter1155 Před 6 lety +1

      Cover crop notill guys may use less than conventional till, around here, fall spray 2 4 d, with residuals , maybe a pre pass in spring , usually 1 to 2 post passes . Neighbor has sprayed notill soys 3 times with glyphosate, (resistant marestail) not much covers planted around here.

    • @Yotaciv
      @Yotaciv Před 6 lety +1

      Tilling distrust fungal colonies(long strands) in the soil but helps reinvigorate bacteria colonies(individual cells). Bacterial can handle soft green material, but tougher stalk material or wood can only be handled by fungus.

    • @Dollapfin
      @Dollapfin Před 6 lety +1

      Brentelec what are you kidding yourself? The damn soil never dries out in spring in the northeast. Farmers HAVE to go no till because the soil is IMPOSSIBLE to do any work on in the muddy conditions. The soil surface can warm up under cover it just doesn’t get dry which stops it from getting too hot because of waters thermal mass. It’s easy to get the surface of no tilled soil up to 60 degrees, but hard to get it above 75.

  • @robertlong7033
    @robertlong7033 Před 7 lety

    Might as well turn it under before the deer get it.

  • @pmessinger
    @pmessinger Před 9 lety +6

    Too bad it's not being harvested for food. Great substitute for rice that's actually more healthy. No gluten and lots of ways to prepare it. I understand turning it into the soil, but you'd think occasional harvesting would be possible too.

  • @danvanhoose6783
    @danvanhoose6783 Před 7 lety +4

    at least they didn't use roundup toburn it down

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety +1

      Gosh no! The purpose of this buckwheat was to provide a cover crop, and then turn it back into amend the soil. Our family's credo since the mid 1800's has been "Be Good To The Land, And The Land Will Be Good To You".

    • @franc362
      @franc362 Před 6 lety

      Dan Van Hoose. Noooo

  • @philmattison1089
    @philmattison1089 Před 5 lety

    Wanted to watch the disks mor than the 4 ft flowers 😒

  • @phil70660
    @phil70660 Před 7 lety +1

    You kill a huge amount of bees and pollinators when you work in full bloom

    • @JonesFamilyFarms
      @JonesFamilyFarms  Před 7 lety +1

      It depends upon the time of day that the work is done. We love pollinators. We love bees. We work to avoid harming either.

    • @phil70660
      @phil70660 Před 7 lety

      OK !!

    • @phil70660
      @phil70660 Před 7 lety +2

      I am a beekeeper and producer of buckwheat honey (8/10 tons / year). The bees visit the buckwheat depending on the temperature and the nectarifere secretion, which means that if the conditions are met, they can go all day And so, to repeat your point, I believe for my part that there are many farmers that money worries more than bees, competent or not!

    • @matthewnason6850
      @matthewnason6850 Před 3 lety

      If it’s a hot day the buckwheat won’t produce nectar for very long in the morning and then it stops. If you’re a beekeeper you’ll find they are delightful to work with in the early morning and on a hot day in the afternoon calm hives are quite annoyed when buckwheat is in bloom. Especially mid summer when there’s not much else.