media gallery

Gallery 1
Planting beans into live cereal rye. The key to planting into cover crop is to get the pounds per acre right when you plant, so it is not too thick.
Gallery 2
Over time, using cover crops and being mindful of your soil health will obtain healthier soil.
Gallery 3
Here is a picture of water that was collected out of the tile outlet in the ditch after a rain. The one on the left is out of a chisel-plowed field and the one on the right is out of our field with cover crop in it.
Gallery 4
By not deep-ripping your soil, you let the earthworms and roots do it for you while keeping good soil structure.
Gallery 5
This is a picture of earthworm castings/poop. It has more nutrients than top soil and will not compact.
Gallery 6
These are barley, oats, radishes and annual rye planted in our bean stubble field with our great plains turbo max.
Gallery 7
These are cereal rye, barley, oats, radishes and annual rye planted in our corn stubble field. They were planted in thirty inch rows to run between the stalks, burying the corn fodder and planting a cover crop.
Gallery 8
These are barley, oats, radishes and annual rye that we planted in our bean stubble field. They were planted in thirty inch rows so the cover crop would be out of the way for planting corn.
This is a picture of using 401 infurrow to the left and no popup on the right. Also the bean on the left that had 401 was planted two days later than the bean on the right.
This is our cover crop striptill bar that we made to seed cover crop in thirty inch rows. We are incorporating the seed with a yetter striptill freshener.
This is a picture of us planting our corn in thirty inch rows. Between our thirty inch cover crop rows that we seeded with our striptill bar.
This is a picture of us planting our beans in fifteen inch rows. Between our thirty inch cover crop rows that we seeded with our striptill bar.

Start typing and press Enter to search