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Does corn or beans benifit more from deep tillage?
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sheffield77
Posted 10/28/2025 17:24 (#11416351 - in reply to #11415979)
Subject: RE: Does corn or beans benifit more from deep tillage?


Farm Boy 37 - 10/28/2025 11:25

sheffield77 - 10/28/2025 10:09

Baby Robin - 10/28/2025 09:06

sheffield77 - 10/28/2025 07:59

RecreationalTillage - 10/28/2025 08:58

Only got half that field done last night before the rain started AGAIN and if isn't black before freezing, there is extremely high risk of no crop getting planned next year. Been there, done that.

One may be surprised that since adopting this crop rotation and intensive tillage strategy, OM% has been going up every year. The expert soil scientists preaching the notill religion fail to mention that there's near zero carbon being burned up from tillage when the soil temperature is below 50F.

Fuel is the lowest cost per acre expense here. Make. It. Black.


Is this a parody account, cause no way you believe all that nonsense.


What’s their MN soil temps Sheffield?

For every 10 degree drop in temp, biological activity drops 50%. Or, reverse this and say for every 10’degree increase in temp, biological activity doubles.


In what biological system does nature "turn it black"?


Prairie fire does a pretty good job of it. If you want to live naturally we should all be running around half naked eating buffalo and constantly waring against the next tribe over. Of course this wouldn’t support anywhere near the current population, and doesn’t sound very appealing to me. Just because something is natural doesn’t make it better.


Well at least you are reasonable.
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