I dont know if you ever get it. But when i tell people guys farm sand they tell me im full of it. Nice ploughing great video. I love watching ploughing everyone around here is pretty much no till. Imagine being out there on a cabless tractor with a two bottom, made for a long day . Technology sure has come along way in a short time. Thanks for sharing
In North Queensland Australia there is a farmer that has sugar cane growing in paddocks that are mostly sand and he has the irrigation system automated, because all the crops need to be watered for 44 weeks a year.
My family farmed in the North Eastern wheatbelt of Western Australia until 1973. We still have relatives in the district. We owned 5,000 acres but these days, you need at least 10,000 acres to make a living growing wheat, canola, barley etc. not many sheep up there these days. We used stump jump disc ploughs, and used to go round and round anti clockwise. Rob Jones
I'm not saying you should redo your intro, but if you are ever thinking about shots that are good enough to be included in something like that the view at *12:43* is really stunning and artful.
Well it's a sad day. I have watched every video of yours, with the exception of the Q&A and will watch later, so now no more videos to watch. ☹️🤣👍 Great videos. Enjoyed them.
It's called a "dead furrow". Old timers like me learned to feather those out with the one way plows back then. It was a skill. But you STILL had a low spot, especially on flat ground. Before "switch plows", there were "rollover" plows with both left and right moldboards. I'll bet you've seen one. Switch plows tend to pull harder. There are only a few in my area. Less Peanuts, so not as much moldboarding here anymore. It's just good to see SOMEONE turning soil. Peanuts do great after cotton. But if you don't bury the stalls, the foreign material in your samples at harvest will kill your grades.
Oh yea for sure it really hurts the grades. And we actually used to have one of those roll over plows didn’t use it much since we had these moldboard plows
@@conleybanman Sometimes the switch plows leave little ribbons of trash exposed. Peanut plants are a LOT tougher than cotton. They'll usually recover from sand damage. I know people who make close to 6000# with NO tillage, but over the country, it seems like the people who PLOW have more consistent yields from year to year. Less weed issues. You sure learn a lot about your land when plowing. Contracts are good this year too!😎
And that’s exactly why we have more peanuts than usual we like the contracts. Corn residue is one of the hardest to bury with plowing, cotton still works pretty good
@@conleybanman We (europe) mostly use reversible mouldboard plows,no till,strip till,minimum till,it seems, mostly do not work here,it has less yields. I did try few times,to plant corn without plowing,but it was bad. I use disc harrow instead mouldboard plough (there is no difference in yield) in late summer and autumn for canola,wheat and barley.
Just came across yall not sure where y'all are farming but looks like around brownfield denver city texas areas I dig it my company sells these tatu aarp plows in brownfield
Hahaha awesome yeah I work for TCT in Lubbock the boss said everyone absolutely loves those plows everyone has switched from deere to them love actually getting to see them used great video
Yea we did do that but it still seems off. We might try again another day when we have more time probably when we hook these tractors up to the planters
Wonder if anyone has ever mounted a small Amazon seed tank on the front and put down sacrificial cover crop with the backside of the plow?, you need weight up front and it wouldn't add much more time to the process.
If you hooked to a set of plows that had never been used, and to a tractor that was intentionally unset, could you manually set those plows to level? No electric setting?
@@conleybanman dang!! That’s a heap of ground a days time! I used to plow all day with a four bottom flip and could throw a baseball over what I covered it seemed like. And our rows weren’t no where as long as yours!! 😂
why do you not chisel plow or something a little less tillage to save from drying out ground have a look in the computer in that slow tractor at the tire size and see if the size matches what you have on it not sure if you have done that or not
We’re wanting to bury the reside instead of just move the dirt around and as for drying out we have to irrigate everything so it’s not really gonna make a difference
Why are you going to the expense of plowing and creating a defined HARD PAN. Have you considered cover crop using multi - culture species to build soil and break up hard pan.
Yes and mainly for peanuts if we would have cotton on this field the upcoming year we would try to do minimum till. But for peanuts we like to have taller beds. And plowing also reduces weeds and volunteer cotton, peanuts don’t have that many chemicals that you can use to kill weeds
Dad rents our Iowa farm out, renter let's me run a 9410R jd and chisel plow, other year his son was in one, me in other, both same track, we was off big time when we met in middle of 80 acres. I went every other pass this fall on 120 acres w/o stopping and when I went back to fill in , I was off big time again
You’d be surprised that’s the least amount of dust that tractor has seen all day. You’d be pretty skilled if you could avoid the dust all day we have very sandy soil so no matter where you go your gonna get dusted.
I recently bought a farm and I rent it out on a 25%/75% ratio of the yield. It is farmed no till. Two years ago we had soybeans. We got about $1.70 per bushel from the U.S. government due to the low price of soybeans caused by China buying elsewhere because they were angry about Trump making them have more fair trade deals. If it were plowed prior to planting instead of using no till would we still have been eligible to receive the $1.70 if we had plowed?
@@mustlovedogs272 is your ground considered highly erodible? If it is, you are to have a tillage plan to prevent erosion, and if you do tillage that causes erosion, you can lose out on Government payments. Some counties are stricter than others on this.
Why do you guys use this clumsy and useless looking ploughs in US? They are working well here but they cannot do good job unless the conitions are very good. Is there anything you know that European farmers didn't know yet? And I noticed you rarely use ploughs but what do you do to bury the dead plant?
@@paulmccallum4229 because they dissolve into the soil and give minerals to it. Also it is harder to cultivate soil and sow in stubble. Plowing job burns so much diesel but does a few jobs together. We got used to do plowing after every sugarbeet, corn, sunflower harvest. My point was actually about the ploughs you guys use. We don't plow in this conditions, just cultivators, disc harrows, power harrows etc are enough to prepare seedbed. After a corn harvest for instance, we definitely plow and bury as much stubble as possible and such kind of ploughs are not good at burying stubble. You must have some other purpose or order of jobs Idk. Just curious about your strategy.
@@mutlucankartal9524 ......#notillcoulters . By burying it you are slowing the biodegradation of your organic residue not speeding it up. All you need is contact with the soil for the microbes and bugs to do their job effectively
If I’m working the ground I call it dirt but if I’m talking about the health and fact then it’s soil. But regardless the ground isn’t gonna change if I call it a different name
There’s some great shots of that FIM Innovator 716 plow at work! Enjoyed the video!👍👍👍
Thanks 👍🏼
I dont know if you ever get it. But when i tell people guys farm sand they tell me im full of it. Nice ploughing great video. I love watching ploughing everyone around here is pretty much no till. Imagine being out there on a cabless tractor with a two bottom, made for a long day . Technology sure has come along way in a short time. Thanks for sharing
Haha yea I can’t imagine sittin in a cabless tractor gettin blown full of dust all day 😅
In North Queensland Australia there is a farmer that has sugar cane growing in paddocks that are mostly sand and he has the irrigation system automated, because all the crops need to be watered for 44 weeks a year.
That’s a lot of watering
@@conleybanman yeah, his yield is at at least 1.5 times higher than most other cane farmers I know at about 180 tonnes to the hectare
Slicker than snot on a brass doorknob. Those plows are pretty handy!
Good Video love y’all tractors good looking equipment
Thanks
My family farmed in the North Eastern wheatbelt of Western Australia until 1973. We still have relatives in the district. We owned 5,000 acres but these days, you need at least 10,000 acres to make a living growing wheat, canola, barley etc. not many sheep up there these days. We used stump jump disc ploughs, and used to go round and round anti clockwise. Rob Jones
Sounds like fun I always wonder what it’s like farming in different places
I'm not saying you should redo your intro, but if you are ever thinking about shots that are good enough to be included in something like that the view at *12:43* is really stunning and artful.
Oh yea I do really love those shots
Hello from greece keep up the nice videos
I really like your content well done boss
Well it's a sad day. I have watched every video of yours, with the exception of the Q&A and will watch later, so now no more videos to watch. ☹️🤣👍 Great videos. Enjoyed them.
Oh well good I’m glad you at least enjoyed them. Haha past me should’ve made more videos 😅
Thank you for sharing your video with us. ..
I still miss the smell of freshly turned soil. I’m envious.
Man you have a nice set up I would love to come work with you love your videos
Amazing video, like from italy! 👍👏👏🔝
Great video
Ocupas trabajador los tractores es lo mejor 👌
It's called a "dead furrow". Old timers like me learned to feather those out with the one way plows back then. It was a skill. But you STILL had a low spot, especially on flat ground. Before "switch plows", there were "rollover" plows with both left and right moldboards. I'll bet you've seen one. Switch plows tend to pull harder. There are only a few in my area. Less Peanuts, so not as much moldboarding here anymore.
It's just good to see SOMEONE turning soil. Peanuts do great after cotton. But if you don't bury the stalls, the foreign material in your samples at harvest will kill your grades.
Oh yea for sure it really hurts the grades. And we actually used to have one of those roll over plows didn’t use it much since we had these moldboard plows
@@conleybanman Sometimes the switch plows leave little ribbons of trash exposed.
Peanut plants are a LOT tougher than cotton. They'll usually recover from sand damage. I know people who make close to 6000# with NO tillage, but over the country, it seems like the people who PLOW have more consistent yields from year to year. Less weed issues.
You sure learn a lot about your land when plowing. Contracts are good this year too!😎
And that’s exactly why we have more peanuts than usual we like the contracts. Corn residue is one of the hardest to bury with plowing, cotton still works pretty good
@@conleybanman We (europe) mostly use reversible mouldboard plows,no till,strip till,minimum till,it seems, mostly do not work here,it has less yields. I did try few times,to plant corn without plowing,but it was bad.
I use disc harrow instead mouldboard plough (there is no difference in yield) in late summer and autumn for canola,wheat and barley.
Very interesting
Do y’all turn all y’all’s dirt? And what are y’all planning to plant in those fields? Thanks for sharing!!
Only fields where we want to plant peanuts
It is a Brazilian plow ? 👋👋from Argentina
VERY PROUD OF Y'ALL
Question from Germany:
Whatfor ploughing?
You are loosing a lot of moisture from the soil.
Most likely to break up compaction to get a better seed bed. Also they are going at an angle to the rows, leveling off the field.
Yes and not really for compaction our ground is so sandy and soft we actually have to repack the ground after plowing
@@conleybanman how come you don't no till?
You have to for peanuts I explained it in my what we do after plowing video
Nice video bro
Nice video 😊👌👌
GABE BROWN ... Multi culture soil building and building CARBON AND ORGANIC IN THE SOIL. WILL MAKE YOUR FARM MORE EFFICIENT AND PRODUCTIVE
Just came across yall not sure where y'all are farming but looks like around brownfield denver city texas areas I dig it my company sells these tatu aarp plows in brownfield
Well you would be correct we’re kind of on the state line we have fields all over the place
Hahaha awesome yeah I work for TCT in Lubbock the boss said everyone absolutely loves those plows everyone has switched from deere to them love actually getting to see them used great video
Oh yea way better than jd plows
Have you tried calibration the Radar u can do in that little screen
Yea we did do that but it still seems off. We might try again another day when we have more time probably when we hook these tractors up to the planters
What camera you using ?
GoPro hero 8
@@conleybanman looks clean on your vids 👌
Back at it!!💪💪
Wonder if anyone has ever mounted a small Amazon seed tank on the front and put down sacrificial cover crop with the backside of the plow?, you need weight up front and it wouldn't add much more time to the process.
A mi me la aplicaban de que no tenia que salir del circulo, jajjaa, Saludos y buen Dia.
If you hooked to a set of plows that had never been used, and to a tractor that was intentionally unset, could you manually set those plows to level? No electric setting?
To make the plow level everything is set manually there’s no electric settings so yes
Hey, do u have problems with your feeders on that plow sometimes?
Has anyone got to drive the new tractor yet
Yea and it wasn’t me 😕
Two big ole John Deere tractors getting some work done!!🦌 🦌
Is there a tire-size variable in your system program? That could affect it's accuracy.
No not really it just recently started to be off so I don’t think it’s about the tires
Its braziliam product???
Yes
Are you going to plant cotton again?
On other ground yes just not on the plowed ground that’s gonna be for peanuts
How do you keep from drifting off to sleep?
Music or sometimes even snacks 😅
How many acres a day can y’all cover with two of those plows?
Around 120 acres a day
@@conleybanman dang!! That’s a heap of ground a days time! I used to plow all day with a four bottom flip and could throw a baseball over what I covered it seemed like. And our rows weren’t no where as long as yours!! 😂
Haha yea it always feels like you don’t get much done but it sure helps with longer rows you don’t waste time turning around as much
Allsup's burritos from west Texas are the best. If you get them east of Lubbock they don't seem to have the same flavor. LOL
Haha well good thing we get the good ones 😅
How deep do you plow?
12-18 inches normally but on this field we did 12
Any idea how much horsepower it takes to pull this
We’re using 335 but some people do with less depending on they’re soil
Good
Whats the width that u put in the gps for that tatu
12 ft
Que chulería cuanto me gustaría trabajar en esta profesión
why do you not chisel plow or something a little less tillage to save from drying out ground have a look in the computer in that slow tractor at the tire size and see if the size matches what you have on it not sure if you have done that or not
We’re wanting to bury the reside instead of just move the dirt around and as for drying out we have to irrigate everything so it’s not really gonna make a difference
Can someone explain to me what happened to no plow farming
We still do it just every now and then we have to plow
Never seen a plow like that before..is that a Texas thing?
Maybe not a Texas thing but you definitely see a lot more of them the more west in Texas you go
How often do you need to replace cutting edges in the plow blades?
Every 1000 acres or so
Our soil is black in Illinois
do you wish you could farm another place?
Sometimes but only because I would like to farm where we’d get more rain. But of course I would never want to leave my home town
Humus TOPSOIL!!!!!??
Why are you going to the expense of plowing and creating a defined HARD PAN.
Have you considered cover crop using multi - culture species to build soil and break up hard pan.
I’m explaining it all in the next video but if we weren’t planting peanuts we’d have a cover crop
It might be the wheel speed sensor
Thanks
We have a 7270r that does the same thing 1 mph behind the set point John deer is still trying to fix it
Why do y'all plow?
To get the ground prepared for the new crops.
Yes and mainly for peanuts if we would have cotton on this field the upcoming year we would try to do minimum till. But for peanuts we like to have taller beds. And plowing also reduces weeds and volunteer cotton, peanuts don’t have that many chemicals that you can use to kill weeds
How deep r u plowing?
1 foot
Dad rents our Iowa farm out, renter let's me run a 9410R jd and chisel plow, other year his son was in one, me in other, both same track, we was off big time when we met in middle of 80 acres. I went every other pass this fall on 120 acres w/o stopping and when I went back to fill in , I was off big time again
Yea sometimes it feels like no matter what you do your always off. Must be something to do with the satellites or somethin
Why do you have to be so close to the tractor in front?
Agree, rear tractor running in more dust than usual all day!
You’d be surprised that’s the least amount of dust that tractor has seen all day. You’d be pretty skilled if you could avoid the dust all day we have very sandy soil so no matter where you go your gonna get dusted.
never seen a plow like that. where still running some old single way disc's.
AARP = American Association of Retired People!
😂
Nike Bo wireless triangle
❤
No tilling de sol !
I recently bought a farm and I rent it out on a 25%/75% ratio of the yield. It is farmed no till. Two years ago we had soybeans. We got about $1.70 per bushel from the U.S. government due to the low price of soybeans caused by China buying elsewhere because they were angry about Trump making them have more fair trade deals. If it were plowed prior to planting instead of using no till would we still have been eligible to receive the $1.70 if we had plowed?
Haven’t heard of that (you having to plow) I don’t know much about soybeans but what’s the average yield
@@conleybanman 48
@@mustlovedogs272 if it was plowed, you still would have received the 1.70
@@whjerts That's good to know. I think a field needs to be plowed one year out of 5 or 6 for many different reasons.
@@mustlovedogs272 is your ground considered highly erodible? If it is, you are to have a tillage plan to prevent erosion, and if you do tillage that causes erosion, you can lose out on Government payments. Some counties are stricter than others on this.
Still plowing and you wonder where the good soil goes.
Nope I have never wondered that it always works wonders in our area
I would bet everything I own that your soil is trash and depleted you should look into other methods
Check out my new video I explain why we plow. But we don’t plow everything just land that we’re planting peanuts
Arada boşluk bırakmalısın öndeki traktörün tozu filitreleri dolduruyor arkadaki traktörün
tatu made in brazil top
Yes it is
Tatu foi longe em. !
Why do you guys use this clumsy and useless looking ploughs in US? They are working well here but they cannot do good job unless the conitions are very good. Is there anything you know that European farmers didn't know yet? And I noticed you rarely use ploughs but what do you do to bury the dead plant?
Why would you want to bury your plant residue?
@@paulmccallum4229 because they dissolve into the soil and give minerals to it. Also it is harder to cultivate soil and sow in stubble. Plowing job burns so much diesel but does a few jobs together. We got used to do plowing after every sugarbeet, corn, sunflower harvest. My point was actually about the ploughs you guys use. We don't plow in this conditions, just cultivators, disc harrows, power harrows etc are enough to prepare seedbed. After a corn harvest for instance, we definitely plow and bury as much stubble as possible and such kind of ploughs are not good at burying stubble. You must have some other purpose or order of jobs Idk. Just curious about your strategy.
@@mutlucankartal9524 ......#notillcoulters . By burying it you are slowing the biodegradation of your organic residue not speeding it up. All you need is contact with the soil for the microbes and bugs to do their job effectively
Why on earth would you have an air cleaner so close to a machine kicking up dust when you don't need to. Muppets
You’d be surprised that’s the least amount of dust that tractor had seen all day. We live in sand the stuff gets everywhere no matter how hard you try
You should not refer to the soil as "dirt" - its soil or its clay - but NOT dirt..!!
If I’m working the ground I call it dirt but if I’m talking about the health and fact then it’s soil. But regardless the ground isn’t gonna change if I call it a different name