Citation Information

  • Title : Farmer inspired demonstration work in continuous no-till in the North Carolina Western Piedmont.
  • Source : Proceedings of the 26th Southern Conservation Tillage Conference for Sustainable Agriculture
  • Publisher : North Carolina Agricultural Research Service
  • Pages : 34-36
  • Year : 2004
  • Conference Name : 26th Southern Conservation Tillage Conference for Sustainable Agriculture. June 8-9, 2004, Raleigh, North Carolina
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Gibson, S. G.
    • Yarboro, W.
    • Hamrick, M.
    • Thompson, S.
    • King, R.
  • Climates: Temperate (C). Humid subtropical (Cwa, Cfa).
  • Cropping Systems: Continuous cropping. Maize. Irrigated cropping systems. No-till cropping systems. Soybean. Wheat.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

In addition to regular programming, County Agricultural Extension agents are asked many times to respond to questions, suggestions and concerns by their farmer clientele. In North Carolina as in other states an advisory leadership system is in place and farmers can formally and informally make suggestions and requests for on-farm demonstrational work. In many cases what the farmers are observing in their fields and/or things they have read "spark" the interactions with agents. Such has been the case in Cleveland County, NC. For example in the early continuous no-till era many area farmers were concerned about soil compaction. Measurements and simple demonstrations conducted by the Cleveland and Lincoln County agents and supported by the NCSU Soil Science Department and Cleveland County Government helped alleviate these concerns. Later as fields were in continuous no-till for 5 or more years, farmers began to notice a greater than expected development of their crops prior to major applications of fertilizer nitrogen. These observations led to a replicated test in wheat conducted by the Cleveland County Agricultural Extension agent comparing a field in a 2 year no-till wheat soybean rotation verses a nearby field in a 5 year continuous no-till wheat soybean rotation. Also a 6 year replicated test was initiated on Cleveland County owned land that had been in continuous no-till for 10 years. The test was set up as a continuous soybean corn rotation and in addition to the standard dryland portion, irrigation was used in part of the study to simulate a "good" corn year. Five nitrogen rates were used. The economics of the cost of fertilizer nitrogen was used to demonstrate that the Realistic Yield Expectation (RYE) method for determining nitrogen rates was very much applicable in continuous no-till. Both the wheat and corn tests indicated that residual soil nitrogen was indeed becoming a major factor in continuous no-till for these field crops and when farmers considered the realities of the weather very likely nitrogen rates can be reduced with confidence.

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