New Farm

   / New Farm #11  
Bill,
Are you talking about farming or are you talking about gardening? Two completely different applications. I wouldn't use roundup on my garden either. But how many people are going to go out with a hoe and take the weeds out of a thousand acres of soybeans? The man here asked about getting his place ready to farm. Like JD has said you turn that soil over repeatedly you're going to have problems. The only way to get hayground ready for the next year is to spray it. Unless you worked the ground for three or four years there's isn't an option. Now I agree on chemicals and such but here in the Midwest especially you have alot of problem with runoff. The topsoil is slowly being eroded to nothing. That's why the farmers went to no til. With no til you have no choice but to apply chemicals. I know what you're saying but with beans and corn at all time lows there is no way that a farmer could stay in business, they don't now, without chemicals. I'm not saying it's the best thing to do but it is how it's done.

18-35034-TRACTO~1.GIF
 
   / New Farm
  • Thread Starter
#12  
What I have done on smaller areas is to cover them with black plastic for several weeks. This kills the existing plants. I have then rototilled and built deep, wide beds. This eliminates the need for repeated tilling. I have some tall trees to split and use for 12" tall borders.

The advice that I must kill the existing cover if I want to get it ready for next year was appreciated. I think my tarp method will work. The rock removal tips have been helpful. I will hire a big machine to come out and till the ground and remove the rocks.

I want to go all organic so Roundup, while very effective, is out. Folks desire to avoid the chemicals contained in commercial Ag products are one reason that I expect expanding from gardening for my family into organic vegetable farming will be profitable. The deep wide bed method used with proper crop rotation will keep weeds, pests and disease to manageable levels.

Last year I grew 32 different types of fruits and vegetables. This year I dropped the ones we did not like or that did not perform well. I have chickens and sheep and compost for nitrogen and I use rock phosphate and greensand for P & K.

My wost trouble is slugs. Those evil creatures straight from the pits of Hell! I use WorryFree Iron Phosphate and flour slug bait and am going to start using diamatacious earth in my ongoing battle. If this fails I will string 12 volt lines close together to shock the little *%@!%s.

Frank
 
   / New Farm #13  
Cowboydoc,

I'm talking about both large scale and small scale farming/gardening.

Don't matter whether it's a 1/10 acre or 2000 acres, there are more friendly (and cost effective) ways of weed control other than using chemicals.

Bill
 
   / New Farm #14  
P.S.: farmers around here turn under the hay pastures every 5-10 yrs (depending on weed growth) and reseed them.

No chemicals used.

Fertilizer is composted cow manure.

There are ways to do the same for other crops besides hay....

Bill
 
   / New Farm #15  
I would be really interested in how that is done Bill. Large scale no till farming I haven't seen how it could be done. As far as hay fields same thing. I'm putting in 60 acres of hay next year on that ground that has been in CRP for 10 years. Everyone that I've talked to has told me the only way to keep the weeds and grass from coming up in my alfalfa is to roundup it and then plow, disc, and harrow. If there's a better way by all means let me know.

18-35034-TRACTO~1.GIF
 
   / New Farm #16  
OK, Bill, if you're talking about chemicals in general. I thought you were just talking specifically about Round-Up or the company that makes it. I use a little Round-Up under my fences, and to stop grass growing up through a brick walkway and driveway (I've also tried one called Finale and couldn't tell any difference), but I've never used any herbicide, pesticide, or chemical fertilizer on the garden yet. Of course my primary method of weed control on the garden is another that is criticized here, and that is frequently tilling./w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif

Bird
 
   / New Farm #17  
Bird,
I think alot of things are getting mixed up here, gardening, farming, no til, etc. Growing up back west everything had to be irrigated. Therefore everything was planted in rows and beds. Most everything we raised was cultivated to help keep weeds down. In the midwest there is no irrigation and thus no rows and not much room to cultivate. Different practices. I'm very interested in what Bill has to say about say about large scale no til farming like is done here in the midwest. I know if there was a less costly way to do things these guys would be doing it. Shoot if it's viable I'm going to try it on that hay ground I'm going to plant next year. I do the same as you in our garden. Just til it with the push rototiller a couple times a month. The girls go through and pick the weeds out around the plants. I think what's talked about being excessive is the old plow, disc, and harrow method that created the original dust bowls here in the midwest. Completely different concept from gardening tilling.

18-35034-TRACTO~1.GIF
 
   / New Farm #18  
Yeah, Richard, I think you're right. Of course it can get to be a complicated topic. I've read a little about the no-till farming and understand some of it's being done in this area. I don't know of any irrigated farming being done around here. Most of the farmers use gigantic disk plows (haven't seen a multi-bottom turning plow used in years), apply the anhydrous ammonia for fertilizer, plant, and hope it rains someday.

I'm not too hung up on "organic" since I figure the vast majority of what we eat was grown with chemicals, but I started this garden spot 5 years ago using no chemicals to see how it would do and have just stayed with it. It's generally produced more than we could use or give away, and I've even sold just a tiny bit. However, since I didn't use any chemicals and the grasshoppers destroyed my black-eyed peas by the time I'd gotten enough for about 3 meals, I've been picking a few from a neighbor's patch this week (he did use some pesticides). Besides what we've eaten, my wife has canned a dozen quarts and a half dozen pints this week.

I pulled all the tomato cages and mowed down the tomato plants and okra this morning; gardening is over for another year.

Bird
 
   / New Farm #19  
Just goes to show you the different areas Bird. Farming is pretty much here how you describe there except there's alot of no til. With regards to the garden ours is just getting started here and you're already done!

18-35034-TRACTO~1.GIF
 
   / New Farm #20  
Farmers near here turn it under, leave it for a couple weeks and then disc harrow it until it's not too lumpy and then reseed.

I believe majority of weeds die from the turnover and disc harrowing and the new hay seed outgrows any weeds which survived (shades them out)?

They also hay twice a year here (before any weeds goto seed), but eventually enough weed seeds carry into the pastures from surrounding land that they need to reseed them again.

A farmer neighbor just did all their pastures (~100+ acres)...so far the new hay crop looks pretty darn clean.

Bill
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2021 Toyota Tacoma 4x4 Crew Cab Pickup Truck (A50323)
2021 Toyota Tacoma...
2012 FORD F-650 SUPER DUTY BOX TRUCK (A51243)
2012 FORD F-650...
2017 Ford F-250 4x4 Knapheide Service Truck (A50323)
2017 Ford F-250...
2004 MACK GRANITE CV713 DUMP TRUCK (A51406)
2004 MACK GRANITE...
TOYOTA 42-6FGCU25 LP SIT DOWN FORKLIFT (A50854)
TOYOTA 42-6FGCU25...
4- 6 DRILL COLLARS (A50854)
4- 6 DRILL COLLARS...
 
Top