GrasstoMilk wrote: » So it's okay for slurry but not urea? They are both the same forms of N
mahoney_j wrote: » Yes and I’ve a question for u is it ok to leave slurry up through slats ???,slurry is more about p and k for me than n at this time of year .farmers seem to be loosing common sense when it comes to doing certain tasks and just follow the speil thrown out by certain journos .grass won’t grow when ground temps are under 6 and when ground is borderline too wet why go out and compact it .ive seen no data yet nor can I see with current weather how soil temps could be any higher .nothing only reckless spreading it ,ei
GrasstoMilk wrote: » Fair enough. I'm following research and I trust it more than someone who hasn't done the research. I'm also doing what has worked here for the last number of years since I started spreading early urea. It might not be working today but the days the soil temps are up my grass will be growing while yours is still in the bag. I've a south facing farm and get good winter growth and got decent winter growth compared to most this year, grass has nothing left in it come this time of the year to keep going.
charolais0153 wrote: » There is also an argument that you should have more slurry storage so that you dont have to pollute the environment
mahoney_j wrote: » I follow research but I also farm with a bit of common sense and respect for tbf environment and also my pocket ..I went with a bag of urea last janurary cause conditions and weather were favourable ,there anything but atm so I’m using common sense .did I read somewhere else a few weeks back u were dissapointed with winter growth ????,
jaymla627 wrote: » It's all farm specific, have 60 acres here that I haven't been able to get out on since the middle of September and will be lucky to get out on in march, 75% of ground farmed at the minute isn't travelable with a tractor, and I live at the foot of a mountain with temperatures below freezing the past 3 weeks at night, would the ole urea work for us in your expert opinion
GrasstoMilk wrote: » You did and my farm cover has increased an awful lot since then thankfully. A mixture of underestimating what was there at the time and January growth
mahoney_j wrote: » Gr can’t of been much more than 3/5 per day since Jan 1 regardless of urea spread
mahoney_j wrote: » Fully nitrate complient here as regards slurry storage
Keepgrowing wrote: » I'll be spreading early next week by the looks of the forecast. Ground conditions are good but I won't spread till soil temps are steady at 6 for a few days and rising. Spread it, don't spread it who gives a shyte but accusing people of will waving for having cows out or using a thread to have a go at a journalist makes this place less pleasant.
mahoney_j wrote: » Said journo well able to handle himself dosnt like his methods questioned .nothing personal from me but I’ve a right to ask a question same as he has right to print an article .disregarded another leading dairy advisor with different views a while back not right either
Keepgrowing wrote: » That other "consultant", failed farmer was peddling AI straws not too long ago. A lot of crap out of him too.
mahoney_j wrote: » We all spout crap from time to time ,in fairness to mr vb his views on spreading urea in current conditions make scientific sense whereas the opposite view is just spread which makes no scientific sense failed farmer bit harsh he has rebounded and reinvented himself ,had him here didn’t buy into all his ideas but def did on some and liked an alternative thought provoking view
einn32 wrote: » You would want a tank the size of Europe this Spring to comply with the ban and then accommodate the weather.
Gawddawggonnit wrote: » .https://www.farmersjournal.ie/how-sustainable-are-irish-dairy-farms-343282 How much is accurate?
Timmaay wrote: » Copy and paste the text someone please.
cute geoge wrote: » Wtf is dolerite(lime?}bacteria/microbe source(dung?)/electrical conductivity and this sea water ,how far away is this collected and then doluted with water??? I am lost completely .By the way what ever you are doing it seems to be working but what about the cost of the now invisible urea spread as well as cost of haulage of sea water and whatever else you have being up to
Say my name wrote: » Now I have a bit of time!! Dolerite is a basalt rock formed by a volcanic intrusion that doesn't quite reach the surface. You'll have the formation of schist rock above the intrusion from the heat of the lava. The dolerite that I used was a mafic rock that is the major elements were magnesium, iron and calcite. But it would have every known element on earth in varying proportions and you'd see quartz in it too but as I say every known element. Basalt and granite are rocks high in paramagnetism. Btw dolerite is the stone used as road chippings. Have a look at the grass on the roadside and see if it grows well. Bacteria/microbe source could be dung, slurry or rock dust that had time to work. Electrical conductivity is the term that is used to measure the ability of ions to move in a soil. It is influenced by organic matter, nutrients, salinity and temperature. The seawater well I didn't go far I live in a coastal county. So car, trailer and 200 litre barrel and bucket. It might not be legal so I didn't do that. Then diluted with well water. The seawater is not as far fetched as you think. Farmers in cork and Cornwall used sand from below the high tide mark on their fields centuries ago. Plus Dr Maynard Murray used it in the U.S. many moons ago. But I'm not advocating using it but I used on a once off and diluted and we are in a high rainfall country. By looking at another field it goes well with slurry. But obviously there's sodium available with fertilizer on the market or seaweed products or that physolith stuff.