Funny how he didn't talk about the coleoptiles of different varieties. Some can handle deep. Others not. Also wheat can push through more soil if dry than wet. Drill deep and it rains you will be replanting. There is more to this than just sink it in.
When the combine harvests a crop, the residue is what the combine spreads back out onto the field, what it separated from the seed. The residue gets blown out the back of the combine, and there are adjustments you can make to direct the residue in a certain pattern, and therefore, change the width of the spread. If you leave the spread too narrow, you will have bare lines in the field since the residue wasn't kicked out far enough. Which leads to variability in planting conditions for the next crop, and it can cost you yield.
@@shingtome2179 Only to a point. If it is too wide, it will overlap the previous pass and be thicker. The ideal width is the width that the combine is harvesting on that pass.
What if I planted at the right time seeded 5 at most may be 4.75 inches into the ground but in a good inch in moisture will all of it come up if in moisture? Weather is 67 in day and 35 at night its been 16 days and some is up and some is on its way. Most is up I'd say just curious
@@5er593 it was inconsistent maturity had to cut some sucker heads. But overall we ended up about average for the year. Id almost rather seed a half to 1 inch above the moisture if I ever had to seed that deep again. Seems at about 4 inches seeding depth some wont make it through.
Great job of explaining the moisture and how important that is for the seed. Thanks
Funny how he didn't talk about the coleoptiles of different varieties. Some can handle deep. Others not. Also wheat can push through more soil if dry than wet. Drill deep and it rains you will be replanting. There is more to this than just sink it in.
This guy is awesome. He cracks me up😆
Thanks for all in great info. Indiana
Goods
Agir
Geo
Love the spirit.
Moisture is good info. Spraying the life out of the soil is not good.
"It's awesome I love it!"
Homeboy needs to get laid
Sorry what does residue spread mean?
When the combine harvests a crop, the residue is what the combine spreads back out onto the field, what it separated from the seed. The residue gets blown out the back of the combine, and there are adjustments you can make to direct the residue in a certain pattern, and therefore, change the width of the spread. If you leave the spread too narrow, you will have bare lines in the field since the residue wasn't kicked out far enough. Which leads to variability in planting conditions for the next crop, and it can cost you yield.
@@ShermanT.Potter so is a wider spread better for next crop?
@@shingtome2179 Only to a point. If it is too wide, it will overlap the previous pass and be thicker. The ideal width is the width that the combine is harvesting on that pass.
Beautiful
Trying to grow wheat here in malaysia...wish me luck
Good luck!
Thank you somuch sir.
How do they grow grain in utah on the edge of a salt flat ? Who would try to farm like this ....
What if I planted at the right time seeded 5 at most may be 4.75 inches into the ground but in a good inch in moisture will all of it come up if in moisture? Weather is 67 in day and 35 at night its been 16 days and some is up and some is on its way. Most is up I'd say just curious
How was harvest?
@@5er593 it was inconsistent maturity had to cut some sucker heads. But overall we ended up about average for the year. Id almost rather seed a half to 1 inch above the moisture if I ever had to seed that deep again. Seems at about 4 inches seeding depth some wont make it through.
@@haydenherdrick6244 i drild barley in to corn silage stuble this year 3 inches deep because drill has fixed planting depth.
lovely
Hi
This video is about wheat! Why is he talking about soy bean?
gr8
Less talking but more steps
So basically input, input input. Just keep throwing money at your crop.
You reap what you sow. :) If I get a return on investment, I'll give the crop all the money it wants.