west central MN | I would agree with FlyinIL, you have probable put the same amount of fertilizer on both the good and poor ground for years and you have taken a good crop off of the good ground and you have probable taken a lot less crop off the poor ground that had the same amount of fertilizer. I don't think it is lack of fertilizer that is holding the poor ground back it is just that some ground is just not capable of growing good crops.
Edited by zmracing 11/24/2012 14:07
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