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  • Hamloc
    replied
    Furrow the Seedmaster 15 inch looks pretty good, yields will be interesting to see on the wheat.

    The germ on the canola looks pretty good on the Seedmaster as well. The biggest advantage I see with the Seedmaster over the Horsch is one pass vs two. Thanks for the pictures.

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Seed Master at 4 lbs



    Seed Mater at 4.5 lbs



    As seeding rate goes up , stalks get smaller . That’s normal

    Wish we did a 3 and 2.5 with SM SR now but thought the seed was too big for that low of rate without a planter . Seed size was 6.7 TKW

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Canola trial , Horsch and SM SR

    Horsch at 2.2 lbs


    Seed Master at 3.5 lbs

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Originally posted by shtferbrains View Post
    Are soybeans worth a look for people currently growing fababeans in the northern fringe/swamp?
    The very earliest ones maybe

    Leave a comment:


  • shtferbrains
    replied
    Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
    Very true
    This will be the first time in years where they may actually fill here
    We just do the 20 ac plot now until we get a consistent variety.
    They are around 3.5 to 4 ft tall and podded very well . The 2 early varieties should do very well here without a frost in 14-20 days
    Are soybeans worth a look for people currently growing fababeans in the northern fringe/swamp?

    Leave a comment:


  • WiltonRanch
    replied
    Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
    Without livestock his system is nearly worthless…and the Liberals are following the UN 2030 and WEF plan to vastly reduce livestock production in the name of global warming .
    Dwayne Beck is on the same wavelength as Gabe, sorta. However, Dwayne has some evidence to back up what he says, and he’s not advocating skipping fertilizer like phos. Jerusalem artichoke Gabe

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Originally posted by WiltonRanch View Post
    A but Gabe Brown says you don’t need any fertilizer just need to grow the right plants to pull it from the soil or out of his ass.
    Without livestock his system is nearly worthless…and the Liberals are following the UN 2030 and WEF plan to vastly reduce livestock production in the name of global warming .

    Leave a comment:


  • WiltonRanch
    replied
    Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
    I found this interesting all year ..


    One section of the seed master ran out of dry phos in their last pass
    Showed up just after emergence
    Shorter , thinner and more weeds now
    A but Gabe Brown says you don’t need any fertilizer just need to grow the right plants to pull it from the soil or out of his ass.

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    I found this interesting all year ..


    One section of the seed master ran out of dry phos in their last pass
    Showed up just after emergence
    Shorter , thinner and more weeds now

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Originally posted by beaverdam View Post
    Furrow, were the drills equipped with similar openers?
    No
    The bourgault has 3.5 “ paired row on 12 in space
    The SM SR had single row 15 “

    Dutch is working on a paired row opener for the SM SR so we will see

    Would mainly be using the SM for canola , peas and beans if we go that rout instead of planter .
    Just keep using the ole bourgault for cereals and plots where needed

    Leave a comment:


  • beaverdam
    replied
    Furrow, were the drills equipped with similar openers?

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Originally posted by Hamloc View Post
    Furrow at the start of this thread you had a picture of one crop seeded with a Bourgault, the other with a seedmaster. How do those crops look today?
    Burgault


    Seedmaster SR

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Originally posted by beaverdam View Post
    Not a lot of fields of beans this year, down here. The fields I do see look to be beautiful stands, but now we're coming to crunch time, when they really need the water. Tap been turned off for the last two weeks, yes they root well, but to see the yield that pays big, you need those late summer, early fall rains.
    Very true
    This will be the first time in years where they may actually fill here
    We just do the 20 ac plot now until we get a consistent variety.
    They are around 3.5 to 4 ft tall and podded very well . The 2 early varieties should do very well here without a frost in 14-20 days

    Leave a comment:


  • beaverdam
    replied
    Not a lot of fields of beans this year, down here. The fields I do see look to be beautiful stands, but now we're coming to crunch time, when they really need the water. Tap been turned off for the last two weeks, yes they root well, but to see the yield that pays big, you need those late summer, early fall rains.

    Leave a comment:


  • furrowtickler
    replied
    Soybean plots




    Caught an inch of rain and some small hail but look unaffected.

    Should fill out and have a chance to finish this year with the warm weather the next 2 weeks

    Leave a comment:

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