Sheboygan River Progressive Farmers dig into cover crop termination at field day
Friday, April 30, 2021
(0 Comments)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 30, 2021
Contact: Steven
Schauer
(920) 471-9896 | sschauer@voiceofmilk.com
Sheboygan River Progressive Farmers dig into cover crop termination at field day
GLENBEULAH, Wis. — For farmers, committing to planting cover crops is one thing. Figuring out how to do it is another.
That was the focus at a Sheboygan
River Progressive Farmers field day on April 21 as participants explored the
right seed mix, when to plant and the best time to terminate the crop.
Nearly three dozen farmers heard from
Dan Smith, researcher in the Nutrient and Pest Management Program at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison, along with Tony Peirick, chairman of the Dodge County
Farmers for Healthy Soil – Healthy Waters farmer-led group.
Cover crops have been shown to reduce
soil loss and improve nutrient loading capacity. Wisconsin farmers are
implementing these crops more and more, but there is still a lot of trial and
error happening in fields. Joe Wagner, president of SRPF – a farmer-led
watershed conservation group in Sheboygan County – hosted the field day to
learn more about what to do after crimson clover and turnips make it through
the winter.
“My big thing was when and what to do with the turnips that made it through the winter because I wasn’t expecting that,” Wagner said. “I planted a multispecies cover crop last fall, expecting just the crimson clover to make it and I didn’t know what effect
the turnips would have on my corn. What was talked about today gave me great insight as to when I am going to terminate the turnips.”
Turnips are used as cover crops
because they are inexpensive and grow quickly, which helps them scavenge high
amounts of nitrogen. Turnips also decompose residue to suppress weeds until the
spring.
“It is essential to try these species
on your farm so you get to know how to manage them, how they are going to grow
on your farm and what they are going to look like,” Smith said. “This is a
great test case — a great example of sometimes what can unexpectedly happen when you grow a cover crop, but certainly not a bad thing either. This is something that is easily managed with termination
techniques and very easy to plant into as well.”
As farmers
learn the benefits of cover crops and the biomass they create below the
surface, they begin to understand the advantages of reduced tillage and even
no-till practices. Peirick has been no-tilling for over a decade and has gone a
step further by not using any synthetic fertilizer on his farm.
“It’s going to take farmer-to-farmer contact and talking, along with field days, to show farmers they can do it,” Peirick said about implementing more cover crops. “They are just afraid to do it and everybody is set in their ways. By understanding the
soil, and what living soil is, and by introducing these chemicals, you are killing so much of the biology.”
Peirick has learned over the years that fertilizer and chemicals aren’t the answer on his farm. He hasn’t sprayed either on his crops in years and now plants solely into green.
“I don’t think we’ll ever learn
everything we need to know about the soil,” Peirick said. “It’s an exciting
time in agriculture coming up because regeneration and growing cover crops will
get your soil back to where it is supposed to be. It will also help the farmer’s
bottom line.”
Resources:
SRPF logo
SRPF Field Day photo
album
Joe Wagner video interview
Dan Smith video interview
Tony Peirick video interview
Caption: Dan Smith (left) from UW-Madison’s Nutrient and Pest
Management Program talks with SRPF President Joe Wagner about crimson clover
and turnip cover crops at a Sheboygan River Progressive Farmers field day on April
21 at his farm in Glenbeulah, Wis.
Tweet
about this:
.@srpfarmers’
Joe Wagner hosted a field day to learn about and discuss seed mixes, when to
plant and best time to terminate cover crops. Photos: https://bit.ly/2Qv5oj9
Video: https://bit.ly/3u5w6gE
#conservation #farming #covercrops #sustainability
About
Sheboygan River Progressive Farmers
:
Sheboygan
River Progressive Farmers is a nonprofit farmer-led conservation group in the
Sheboygan River watershed in Sheboygan and Fond du Lac Counties in Wisconsin
whose members explore farming strategies that lead to improved soil health,
greater farming efficiency, sustained profitability and reduced environmental
impact. Members share information gained through field trials with fellow
farmers and strive to foster an understanding of the role of agriculture in the
community. More information: https://srpfarmers.com
# # #
|