Ed_Boysun
Guest
Hi Pengs, always good to hear from folks in Oz, been getting reports that rain has been falling with much more frequency there and you might have a decent crop this year. Hope that's true. Height of cut is mainly determined by where you have to be to get all the lower hanging heads on the tillers. I also like to take enough straw so there isn't a big residue problem next year. Nothing scientific though, just kind of a "seems about right" deal. I don't do any strip farming but there is still a good bit done once you get out of this valley a few miles. I do a wheat _ fallow rotation. My soils have good moisture holding properties so I can conserve enough moisture from the fallow year to add to what we get during the crop year - ends up using two year's rain to grow one crop. Cropping practices vary widely here. Some seed everything every year, some use chemical to keep their fallow clean, and some just use mechanical tillage like I do. Right around this area the crops are: Winter wheat, spring wheat, durum, barley, oats, canola, chick peas, field peas, and a few fields of sugar beets where irrigation water is available. Also starting to see some corn and soys. I just stick to spring wheat. Ed in Montana