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Assessing Yield Variability

This article first appeared in The GROWER magazine.

Variability in crops shows that some parts are not performing as well as others. So what?

Variability is a major problem in the vegetable sectors. It is responsible for unknown but very significant financial losses all the way through the value chain. Variability comes in varied forms, from a variety of causes, with variable results and various appropriate management responses.

It may be a timing thing, a size thing, a quality thing or a quantity thing. It could be caused by weather events, soil differences, seed differences, pest or disease effects or some management factor. It may mean missed yield, lower yield, lower price or higher costs.

Process pea crops are a classic example of relatively minor timing variability causing major losses. If plants flower earlier or later, timing the harvest is problematic and both quantity and quality will be affected.  Some plants will not be ready when the harvesters come through. Others will be over mature and downgrade overall quality. Processing, in particular, needs uniform product and reliable supply.

Have you got crop variability? Assume you do, even if it is not at first noticeable. The key is to know if it is significant, what effect is has on your profitability, and whether it is worth fixing. Sometimes the benefits of dealing with it are not worth the cost. But often a cheap fix can avoid an expensive problem.

LandWISE partnered with Horticulture New Zealand to help growers estimate the value of crop yield variation. A spreadsheet calculates the cost of yield variation, based on measurements made in the field.

The three pieces of information needed are the product value, the area affected, and the yields achieved. A small booklet gives guidelines on determining areas and yields and the spreadsheet does the rest. You can download the calculator and guidelines from http://www.landwise.org.nz/projects/crop-variability/.

Why a calculator? While many farmers do observe variability in crops, few spend time quantifying the value (cost). The calculator and guidelines set out a straightforward process that doesn’t take much time, and does the calculations for you. It presents the results as tonnes and dollars in a table, and as graphs showing relative performance.

The Calculator encourages growers to identify the cause of loss in identified parts of the paddock. It then summarises the relative impact each has on yield.

One of the key pieces of information is quantifying the “Yield Gap”. The Yield Gap refers to the difference between the Potential Yield and the Main Area yield. It reflects an overall penalty and often costs more than the obvious losses. But because it affects the whole paddock it is not easily noticed.

If the season has been normal, and there are no obvious seed, equipment or management problems, look to soil condition or irrigation management as possible causes.

The Yield Variability Calculator estimates the value of crop loss. Thinking about how often these losses are suffered, how to avoid them in future what the cost of remediation may be, will help growers determine what, if any, action to take.

Dan Bloomer, LandWISE

LandWISE News February 2013

Pukekohe Field Walk with Tim Chamen – 1:00pm Thursday 21 February

Hosted by A.S. Wilcox at Seath’s Block, 567 Mercer Ferry Rd, Pukekawa

We are fortunate to have Tim Chamen in the country on his way to the International Controlled Traffic Conference in Toowoomba later this month. He is keen to join our field walk and keen to share stories.

Tim had a long research career at the Silsoe Research Institute in the UK, looking at the effects of soil tillage and compaction on soil and crop responses. He recently recently received a doctorate covering field traffic, soils and crops.

Since 1996 he has consulted on soil tillage and increasingly on ways of avoiding soil damage from machinery. In 2007 he established CTF Europe Ltd to facilitate controlled traffic farming across Europe. CTF Europe uses a membership scheme and offers consultancy to individuals or groups.

The focus of the day at Seath’s is the Controlled Traffic Farming that the Wilcox team has been running for four years. Having now completed a full crop rotation cycle (onions, potatoes, cereals, onions) they have a good grasp of the issues and have certainly got a good idea of the benefits. Does halving costs have appeal?

We’ll also consider how the programme fits the theme of “Resilient Cropping”, increasing farm capacity to bounce back from adverse events, whatever they may be.

LandWISE 2013 – 11th Annual Conference 15 – 17 May 2013

Put the 15-16 and 17 May 2013 in your diary for the 11th Annual LandWISE Conference.

Debbie Walton has rejoined our team, working to ensure another successful conference. She is contactable via info@landwise.org.nz or Phone 06 650 4531.

Most of our (very loyal) sponsors have already caught up with us, but anyone else can contact Debbie to discuss opportunities.

Part 1: 15-16 May “New Ideas”

The traditional LandWISE Conference on 15-16 May will be held at the Havelock North Community Centre.

We have a few slots left in the programme, which it is looking fresh and interesting. If you have a presentation you would like added, or ideas you want covered, please direct your query to Dan via dan@landwise.org.nz or Phone 06 876 6630. Please be quick as things are filling very quickly.

Part 2: 17th May “Going into Irrigation” LandWISE/IrrigationNZ

Friday 17th May will be a special focus day based in Tikokino, on the Ruataniwha Plains. “Going into Irrigation” is a joint effort with Irrigation New Zealand.

While set firmly in the Ruataniwha Water Study area, the content and contacts apply to anyone thinking of making the jump into irrigation. They may be an independent abstractor or in an existing, new or proposed scheme area.

Registration

Conference registration will be available on-line soon. A notice will be sent to you with details. As usual, discounted rates for paid up members.

LandWISE Video Competition – Cash Prize

Entries are open for the Inaugural LandWISE Farm Video Competition. Don’t leave it too late to grab some clips.

Theme 2013

“Farming is great – it’s good for us all.”

Make a “YouTube” clip video that improves understanding and perception of agriculture among the urban populace. All aspiring Smartphone Jacksons, start planning and grabbing clips while there’s stuff happening down on the farm!

The main message this month is “GET FILMING”. Phone video is just fine!

We know you are hard out at present, but take 30 seconds now and then to capture key farm events. Remind the public that you produce their breakfast, lunch, dinner and tea. Harvest pictures will drive that message. Remind them it takes time, skill and dedication – care at planting, excellent husbandry, crop monitoring, efficient watering – and lots of hard work.

How many boxes of cornflakes does your farm produce? How many salad meals? Hash-browns? Servings of peas? Cobs of corn?

Tip: Good light is important for good video, especially using small lenses.

Entries close 12 noon, Monday 6th May 2013.
Foreign Entries welcome

By entering, you agree that LandWISE can use your video and to post your entry on internet.

Serving suggestions:

  • Maximum length four minutes
  • Provide good quality information about farming
  • Health and Safety are important – avoid Jackass stuff
  • Originality is highly valued, even if it is parody
  • Involve real farm staff (and animals and machines)
  • Sell farming to urban folk (honestly)
  • Soundtrack choice has a huge effect on impact
  • Humour counts a lot
  • Video quality needs to be acceptable, remember it’s YouTube standard, but it should be ok full-screen

Judging and Winners

Top entries will be shown at the LandWISE Conference dinner, where the winners will be announced.

Judges’ decision is final, cannot be appealed, and need not be justified.

Protocols for GPS Guidance

We’ve updated the format of the booklet, Protocols for GPS Guidance so it prints nicely for A5 layout. This makes it a good handbook size with font large enough to read!

See http://www.landwise.org.nz/publications/

LandWISE Membership

SIGN UP ON LINE: Complete a membership application here>

Feedback

You got this far! We’d appreciate feedback on this newsletter, or anything else LandWISE does or could do. Send us a message here>

For all LandWISE communications:
email     info@landwise.org.nz

LandWISE News April 10 2012

LandWISE 2012 – 10th Annual Conference

Put 22, 23 and 24 May 2012 in your diary for the 10th Annual LandWISE Conference.

The title is Site Specific Management: growing within limits. We are looking at the changing requirements for farming, in particular the increasing need to demonstrate that farming has minimal environmental impact. Look for a focus on soil water management, irrigation, monitoring and drainage.

For the first time we also have a day focused on Smart Viticulture. This builds on current LandWISE work with local viticulturists investigating the benefits, costs and logistics of applying zone management using precision viticulture techniques.

  • People with viticulture interests will find Day 1 extremely useful. They will also see there are great presentations on the other days.
  • LandWISE traditionalists be assured; Days 2 and 3 follow the usual pattern. But do have a look at the Day 1 programme – you’ll find a lot there that can give you completely new ideas.

The draft programme and more details are available here http://www.landwise.org.nz/events/landwise2012/ . This page will be updated as conference draws nearer, and you’ll receive direct messages too.

Conference Speakers

We are extremely pleased to have support of a number of excellent speakers – returning and new. Here are a few to start the list:

  • Rob Bramley CSIRO Adelaide
  • Tim Neale precisionagriculture.com.au
  • Craig Ross Landcare Research
  • James Peck PX Farms, UK
  • Alistair Bisley Land and Water Forum
  • Caine Thompson Mission Estate
  • Mark Krasnow Eastern Institute of Technology – Viticulture
  • Graeme Cox OptiSurface, Australia

More soon . . .

Conference Registration

Conference registration is available on the LandWISE website, click here>. As usual, discounted rates for members.

Conference Platinum Sponsors

 

We are very pleased to announce CASE IH has joined Eastern Institute of Technology as a Platinum Sponsor for Conference 2012. Case IH has been a willing LandWISE supporter in the past and their continued support is appreciated. Ivan Wilbore and colleagues will be about during the conference and at the field session for those wanting to catch up about Case IH products.

Conference Gold Sponsors

A number of organisations have taken up Gold Sponsorships. We are grateful to returning sponsors Trimble GPS Control Systems, AgriTurf John Deere, Hawke’s Bay Regional Council and Product groups of Horticulture NZ. We are pleased to welcome a new sponsor, GPS-It.

Secondary School Students

Apatu Farms is sponsoring two Lindisfarne student conference attendances again this year. They are joined by WaterForce who are also sponsoring two school student attendances which are yet to be allocated. EIT is supporting some of their viticulture students to the Viticulture day.

LandWISE believes giving top students the opportunity to see farming at its best is one of the best ways to attract top people into the sector. Anyone else who wants to sponsor either secondary or tertiary students please contact us info@landwise.org.nz or talk to us at 06 650 4531.

LandWISE News March 2012

LandWISE 2012 – 10th Annual Conference May 2012

Put the 22, 23 and 24 May 2012 in your diary for the 10th Annual LandWISE Conference.

The title is Site Specific Management: growing within limits. We are looking at the changing requirements for farming, in particular the increasing need to demonstrate that farming has minimal environmental impact. Look for a focus on soil water management, irrigation, monitoring and drainage.

For the first time we also have a day focused on Smart Viticulture. This builds on current LandWISE work with local viticulturists investigating the benefits, costs and logistics of applying zonal management using precsion viticulture techniques.

  • People with viticulture interests will find Day 1 extremely useful. They will also see there are great presentations on the other days.
  • LandWISE traditionalists be assured; Days 2 and 3 follow the usual pattern. But do have a look at the Day 1 programme – you’ll find a lot there that can give you completely new ideas.

The draft programme and more details are available here http://www.landwise.org.nz/events/landwise2012/. This page will be updated as conference draws nearer, and you’ll receive direct messages too.

Conference registration is available on-line. As usual, discounted rates for members.

Conference Platinum Sponsor

We are very pleased to announce Eastern Institute of Technology as a new Platinum Sponsor for Conference 2012. There are strong cross-overs between an institute such as this and LandWISE with our focus on upskilling for the primary industry sectors.

EIT has a very strong viticulture and wine programme, and is also active in agriculture and horticulture in Hawke’s Bay and the East Coast/Tairawhiti.

Key Speakers

We are also delighted that Rob Bramley from CSIRO in Adelaide will be one of our key presenters. Rob is well known for his precision viticulture work, but is also very experienced in broadacre crops.

Tom Botterill from the Geospatial Research Centre at the University of Canterbury will talk about machine vision and robot pruning. More announcements coming soon . . .

 

Driverless Tractor

LandWISE Member Matt Flowerday from GPS-It sent a link to this site for a new driverless tractor.

A few of you have expressed interest in autonomous tractors – so with a favourable exchange rate and a $US 150,000 price tag, here’s your chance.

It’s interesting for a few reasons:

  • The 225 kW tractor can be controlled in real-time from a base station with a remote control device that can be up to 40 km away. The master base station can handle up to 16 operating tractors at one time.
  • Hew can couple units together for more power, like train locomotives
  • It uses twin laser unit called LIPS (Laser Imaging Position System) rather than GPS (we need to learn more about LIPS)
  • Power is diesel electric with a 15 to 25% better fuel economy than conventional systems

Australian Conferences

Dan attended the SPAA Precision Agriculture Australia Expo in Port Lincoln, South Australia and the precisionagriculture.com.au Conference in Maroochydor, Queensland in February.
Speakers discussed nutrient tests we don’t use, plants we seldom grow, pests, diseases and weeds that remain thankfully foreign, and yields most New Zealand farmers would consider disastrous. They talked of soil electromagnetic sensors, pH sensors, biomass sensors, protein sensors, animal trackers and robots. Of precision farming in Canada, Scotland, England, New Zealand, Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia.

The messages were strikingly familiar. In essence; know and look after your soil, monitor your crop, and apply inputs where they give the best returns.
At both events, the farm was the focus; the technologies merely tools to help manage better. Much, much better.

A couple of areas to watch:

  • UAV proliferation. There are more and more self-flying ‘toy’ planes and helicopters suited to crop inspection tasks. With increasingly light and quality cameras, and return to base GPS guidance they have great potential. There are a few issues yet with processing the data, and like all sensor things, ground trothing is still needed.
  • RFID Tags. The advances in electronic tagging have been very fast, and new applications are only now being realised. With new technologies, the range of some devices has become quite extraordinary, offering ability to track items or animals at increasing distances. Cheaply.

A Guide to Smart Farming

Our Guide to Smart Farming book has been the subject of tremendous acclaim from farmers, industry, researchers and teaching staff in New Zealand and overseas. Thanks for the feedback!

About 7,000 copies were printed, and we’ve only 300 left in stock, so that’s a lot that are out there and, from what we hear, being read.

Purchasing copies:

A Guide to Smart Farming was distributed free to people in the LandWISE Community. Extra copies are available through TradeMe at $29.90 plus post including GST. Search TradeMe guide smart farming and it will pop up.

See the Table of Contents here>

Smart Farming the Game to be in

This article first appeared in The GROWER magazine in December 2011

Dan Bloomer, LandWISE

A Guide to Smart Farming

“New Zealand has a unique ability to supply quality produce to a rapidly increasing global market,” says Hew Dalrymple. “But to do so sustainably requires new approaches to farming and new skills for those on the land.”

A book published in December contains a wealth of information that will help. A Guide to Smart Farming has case studies of farmers using new technologies, and expert articles explaining how the technologies work.

The book encapsulates learning which is the result of many years’ collaboration, especially between LandWISE, the Foundation for Arable Research, Horticulture New Zealand, and Plant & Food Research. At its core are Sustainable Farming fund projects, Advanced Cropping Systems and Holding it Together.

View the Table of Contents here>

Advanced Cropping Systems

Advanced Cropping Systems followed twelve farmers assessing precision farming technology. Perhaps not surprisingly, the focus for some shifted in the three years of the project.

FAR’s Tracey Wylie worked with Tim Macfarlane mapping weed infestations with a canopy sensor. Their weed map did not correlate very well with the weed problem, but a soil map did.  As Tracey and Tim say, “We need to take all the information we have into account, we can’t assume a single tool will tell us what we want to know.”

Travis and Nigel Sue fitted RTK-GPS and autosteer for their fresh vegetable operation. Now the rows are dead straight and perfectly spaced every time. They have labour and input savings, and no land is wasted. “We should have had it years ago,” they say.

A half-paddock trial of permanent beds for onions, potatoes and cereals at A.S Wilcox and Sons controlled traffic on the paddock and saved soil, oil and toil. Already expanded to 40ha, they are now focused on rolling the new system out across the business.

Hugh Ritchie wants easy data transfer between GPS devices and computer programmes to avoid double and triple data entry, avoid errors, and increase efficiency. Unfortunately a solution does not look imminent! Sjaak Wolfert is leading a major EU project on this topic. “This is a global problem. There is no single standard for data exchange in agriculture, and manufacturers are slow to use those that are available,” Sjaak says.

In partnership with Keith Nicoll, Hugh has made major advances with precision drainage installing plastic pipe with a gravel envelope. The equipment maps the paddock using RTK-GPS, calculates the drain gradients, and controls the laying machinery automatically, removing costs from the operation.

Holding it Together

Holding it Together focused on retaining soil and soil quality. Plant & Food scientist Paul Johnstone led the Fresh Vegetable Product Group, Potatoes New Zealand, LandWISE project. “There are many practical things we can do to look after this key resource,” he says.

Scott Lawson is one of several crop farmers using furrow dyking in their wheel tracks. “It is normal practice for us now,” he says. “We were getting crop loss after rain or irrigation when water ran along wheel tracks and drowned out crop. The furrow dyker keeps the water where it lands while it soaks in.”

Antonia Glaria worked with Paul on a range of cover crop options for fresh vegetable growers. They found maize could recapture lost nutrients including nitrogen. “We’ve studied maize in a number of situations,” says Paul. “It is a very deep rooted crop, and a great scavenger of nutrients. In some cases, all the nutrients needed can be obtained from deep in the soil – nutrients that would otherwise leach and cause problems down the track.”

A Guide to Smart Farming is a great publication,” says Hew Dalrymple. “Every cropping farmer should get a copy and read it. It will help them maximise opportunities and make sure our land and water is in the best condition for the next generation.”

Orders

Copies of the book A Guide to Smart Farming are available from LandWISE for $NZ 29-95 plus postage: Click here or contact us via info@landwise.org.nz

New Zealand and Australian residents can order copies and pay on-line by credit card via TradeMe. Search for Guide to Smart Farming

Feedback

Please feel free to post feedback – does the book give good information? What could be added or updated?

 

Smart Spraying in Hawke’s Bay

James Powrie and Dan Bloomer, LandWISE Inc.

As published in Grower October 2011

A Hawke’s Bay crop farming company wanted spraying done quicker.  Managers also wanted to know agrichemicals were applied in the right place and not wasted.

The farmers liked machines AgTech’s Matt Gordon had built, so got him involved.

Matt says, “Reducing spraying errors and improved application quality put money in the bank for these farmers.”

“They have a big programme spread around Hawke’s Bay and their people put in a big season.  Equipment has to be reliable, comfortable and fast on the road.”   Driver comfort, air suspension and airbag suspension were all on the shopping list.

Matt provided a Multidrive 6195 with a 320 litre/min pump and four-wheel steering.  With four-wheel drive, diff lock and air drive it is designed to get maximum hp on the ground and it hasn’t been stuck yet.

The sprayer holds 4000 litres of mixed spray, and another 400 litres of fresh water for flushing the machine.

The farmers also chose auto-steer and sectional control using Trimble FMX. The GPS monitor in the cab displays spray coverage as the paddock is sprayed, reducing the chance of missed or doubled-up runs.  A Hardy HC5500 auto-rate spray controller adjusts for variation in vehicle speed.

This combination of brands duplicated successful overseas installations. This mix makes the machine unique but parts are readily available so any downtime is minimised.

The 21-m air boom has an air-rail carrying nozzles, allowing for adjustment of nozzle angle from 40 degrees backwards and 30 degrees forwards.  This helps control drift, and lays the plant canopy over for best spray coverage.

Seven individually controlled sections further reduce overlap.  Sections automatically turn off in areas previously sprayed such as headland turns and point rowsand  to avoid spraying waterways, troughs or tracks, then on again to cover unsprayed crop.   The outer sections, where most variation occurs, are slightly shorter.   Individual nozzle control is an option and a possible later upgrade.

The technology improves efficiency by reducing the amount of chemical, water, time and fuel used.

It works because the GPS knows the position of each part of a spray boom, controls whether the section is on or off.

Saving money, time and improving yields mean this technology has to be a winner.   “We work to build machines which are as efficient as possible.  This machine does a very good job and gets the area done fast,” says Matt.

Immense benefits from minimum tillage cropping

As published in Grower May 2011

Dan Bloomer and James Powrie – LandWISE Inc.

Two days after harvest in poor weather conditions, worm castings covered the ground driven on by bean harvesters.
We were at Hugh Ritchie’s farm in Central Hawke’s Bay.  It was one of those times when we see a farmer really benefit from changes they have made.  It was confirmation that the effort and challenge has been worth it.

“This paddock is on one of our more difficult soils, with compaction issues holding us back before.  We don’t want multiple cultivations that require more labour and more steel in the ground.  Making the change to minimum tillage has been very successful here, we treat the soil as it prefers to be treated and we are being rewarded for that,” says Hugh.

The paddock was strip tilled then planted with beans.  Fuel use for establishment was 10 litres per hectare, against about 70 litres per hectares for a conventional heavy cultivation system.  With diesel at nearly $1.70/litre today those litres are worth saving.

Hugh’s bean yields were at the upper end for the season.   Even with yield and costs so compelling, the surprise was yet to come. The thing Hugh was most excited about was the state of his soil after harvest.

The bean roots had penetrated fully through the soil, showing little or no compaction. After harvest the surface was covered in worm castings, including in the tracks.  The depressions of the harvest tracks were barely noticeable and the soil opened up easily with a spade.

Hugh has achieved these improvements after adopting strip till, direct drill and GPS guidance.  He is planning to continue to move toward controlled traffic farming.  It is exciting to see, that even without matched equipment and with random traffic at harvest, Hugh and his soil are gaining from the changes made to his system.

Harvester configuration is often given as a reason not to adopt controlled traffic.   Hugh’s example shows that some discipline, minimum tillage and a focus on reducing compaction, has great benefits.  Common sense, some simple changes and new technology have slashed Hugh’s fuel bill and are improving his soil.

Where might you start?  Ask yourself the question – How can I burn less fuel and take better care of my soil?
Why is that tractor belching smoke? Is that heavy draft operation necessary?  Why is so much compaction present?  Is that second cultivation necessary?  Would a strip till or min till operation have been more fuel efficient and better for the soil?  Am I working against myself?  Am I wasting soil, oil and toil?

Talk to other farmers at a LandWISE or FAR event or conference.  See the LandWISE website for information and events  www.landwise.org.nz  Contact us and let us put you in touch with farmers who are making changes, or for relevant information on reducing tillage, controlled traffic farming and GPS guidance.

Water, oil and phosphate

As published in March 2011 Grower

Dan Bloomer, LandWISE

Farmers are under constant pressure from the community. You hear and see it in the media everyday. “Cut food prices!” “Stop sucking our rivers dry!” “Produce more food!”
We hear of fully allocated water, peak oil, peak phosphate, and rising populations with higher and higher expectations (no observable peak there yet). So what can anyone do?

The last few generations have seen massive increases in agricultural productivity. Often attributed to increased fertiliser, chemical sprays and irrigation, it is often portrayed as negative.  But increased productivity is also the result of increased efficiency and learning compounding on learning. Efficient farmers produce more crop per hectare, more crop per litre of water, per litre of oil, per kilogram of phosphate. So they eke out those finite resources to give more people better nutrition.

Water, oil and phosphate are finite resources. Being more efficient doesn’t make any more. But it gives time to come up with the next great plan. And that’s what we must do with urgency.
Let’s think for a minute about those three farm inputs.
In the case of oil (energy), we ultimately need substitutes. Alternative energy options that may suit cities are not practical on farm. So agriculture is seen as a high priority area for remaining oil supplies (after the military).
Our immediate task is to increase efficiency until viable agricultural energy alternatives are developed. In the medium term, bio-fuel economics will give “Grow your own” new meaning. But more paddocks set aside for tractor feed means less for human feed. Even in the long term, energy efficiency must be a very high priority.
For crop production, the major efficiency gains farmers can have right now come from reduced cultivation. Avoid compaction, cultivate less, improve soil and require less cultivation. A positive spiral up the slippery slope.

Phosphate and water don’t have substitutes. Efficient use and recycling are essential.
Phosphate is lost in eroding soil and in our farm effluent and urban waste streams. It goes to sea. It takes millennia to return to land in mineable quantities, if we don’t remove the fish stocks in the meantime.

The Taupo urban treatment system applies waste to soil and produces stock feed, so the nutrients are rapidly returned to the agricultural system. We need the rest of the country (world) to follow suit. On farm, we need to minimise phosphate use and avoid excess soil levels. And we need to stop soil erosion and loss of effluent.  Water largely recycles itself and New Zealand has a very fortunate short cycling period. We do need to capture rainfall (free irrigation) and retain water in the landscape. That means strategic use of water storage including farm and community dams. On farm, it also means keeping soils in top condition to allow infiltration and store as much water as possible, and still ensure suitable drainage.
Our other main duty is looking after water quality, keeping nutrients levels suitable for stable ecosystems. We need to keep farm nutrients on the farm for growth. The cost of external nutrients is increasing. Soil is a resource we must retain. So there are multiple drivers for keeping soil and nutrients away from waterways.
Soil is the linking theme throughout this article. Too often we draw down on this natural capital for short term gain. It is the base farm resource and biggest capital investment. It is central to all we do and deserves as much care, repair and maintenance as any asset.

Auckland Site Visits

James has been visiting our Auckland project farmers, NZ Fresh Cuts and AS Wilcox.

The LandWISE focus at A S Wilcox is a trial introducing Controlled Traffic Farming concepts into onion and potato cropping. A split paddock trial comparing conventional practice with a permanent bed controlled traffic system is in its early stages. An onion crop was planted in Autumn, and survival and growth appear similar in both the controlled traffic and conventionally treated areas. At this stage of course, both areas have been treated similarly.

The real tests begin at harvest when significant changes to conventional practice will be required to preserve the beds. Gains are expected in soil structure, operational costs and fuel savings. Matching wheel widths across operations, and especially harvesting, are often challenging but are anticipated to be worth the effort. Watch this space.

The goal of LandWISE work with NZ Fresh Cuts is minimizing inputs while retaining high quality yields. They have adopted a permanent bed controlled traffic system across much of their salad growing operations. Fuel, time and labour savings are proving to be dramatic as the system changes are taking effect.

Next LandWISE and NZ Fresh Cuts are looking at the possibility of using of optical sensors to assist in the management of nitrogen fertilisers. Manager, Chris Butler hopes that quantifying crop greenness will enable best use of nitrogen, avoiding overuse while ensuring high quality green leaf.

Field walks will be held later in November at these two sites, dates to be advised.