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 North Carolina | I guess that what I'm s trying to say is that just because it's not showing a response in Illinois or Missouria in a good yielding environment, doesn't mean that it will not show a really good response in a low yielding state like NC. Total different soil. I know because I have family in MO that farms. And I know their soil fairly well. And I think it has caught on to some extent because of strip till and deep placement on corn. Then rotating to beans, it may not be banded under beans but still placed deeper in the soil where the P needs to be for the bean crop. The concept in my first post was to get it deeper in the ground, where there is more moisture and closer to roots to take up the fertilizer and not laying on top and waiting on time and rain to get it in the root zone. They make pottery and bricks out of some type of clay, and neither of them will take water that well much less let fertilizer get down in the root zone where we need it. That is what we have heavy red clay. LOL
Edited by dhfarmboy1066 2/5/2026 23:32
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