A University of Kansas researcher and his team is using laser-based technology to study soil hydrology, including soil pores and preferential water flow in soils, which could one day help experts predict droughts and water recharge, and improve water-use efficiency.
It’s certainly great to see how far soil-moisture profiles have come across the Great Plains over the past year. Looking at the U.S. Drought Monitor, you don’t see a sea of brown and red colors that the government uses to signify severe major drought problems.
We all know that no-till management can never be a “one-size-fits-all” entity. No-till is just one tool in our growing toolbox to better manage our soils for crop production. It’s certainly one of the best tools, because the master of all plant production — Mother Nature — uses it!
A grain sorghum variety trial was initiated at the High Plains Agricultural Laboratory to identify early maturing grain sorghum cultivars with reliably high yield potential in the high plains ecoregion of western Nebraska.
University of Nebraska Extension discusses optimal field pea seeding rates for western Nebraska, based on recommendations from other regions of the U.S.
Replacing no-till summer fallow with a cool-season legume crop, such as grain-type field peas, can reduce herbicide applications, provide rotational benefits through nitrogen (N) fixation and increase biodiversity above and below ground, says University of Nebraska Extension.
Being relatively new to farming allows Hooper, Neb., no-tiller Chad Christianson to adopt conservation practices without tradition holding back his ingenuity.
When I started farming with my father-in-law, John Ruwe, I thought I was at a real disadvantage to my peers who came from generations of farm families — those who had the opportunity to farm day in and day out alongside their parents and grandparents.
Earlier this month, about 170 people attended the Farming Evolution no-till conference in Holyoke, Colo., where attendees covered a number of topics related to no-till practices, cover cropping and soil health principles.
Rill erosion from recent snowmelt and rainstorms in Pennsylvania shows how vulnerable soils are, but here are some tips from Pennsylvania State University to avoid such erosion.
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On this edition of Conservation Ag Update, brought to you by CultivAce, Gregg Sanford, Wisconsin Integrated Cropping Systems Trial manager, reveals how no-till is stacking up to other major systems in year 34 of the trial.
Needham Ag understands the role of technology in making better use of limited resources within a specific environment by drawing on a wealth of global experience to overcome the challenges facing today's farmers, manufacturers and dealers.
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