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  Technical Updates
Tillage To Swear By

By Greg Stewart - Corn Specialist - OMAFRA

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  • Plow - a four letter word? No-till - the moral high ground within tillage systems? What about strip-till, ridge-till, vertical-till, mulch-till, placebo-till, testosterone-till or conservation-till?

    Over the years we have had a great time defining and labelling the way we till the soil. In some cases the discussion has become quite heated, as ardent no-tillers have challenged the more conventionally minded to change. Sometimes the argument has had a cost of production spin, especially when commodity prices were low. At other times the emphasis has been on soil conservation and the merits of leaving enough residue to protect soil from wind and water erosion.

    In Ontario, the trend towards conservation tillage has ebbed and flowed. So where are we now? Consider the advancements that might influence tillage systems:

    • significantly improved planting equipment,

    • a whole host of planter modifications to foster reduced tillage success,

    • a complete new segment of "vertical" tillage equipment that is designed to handle high residue situations,

    • seed that is more tolerant to reduced tillage stress,

    • herbicide resistant crops,

    • and seed treatments that mitigate some of the challenges of unplowed seedbeds.

    And yet when we looked around Ontario in the spring of 2012 there was arguably less ground covered with residue than in quite some time.

    Perhaps it is time to refocus on the end game and not the titles.

    30% Ground Cover

    Research has identified the maintenance of a minimum of 30% ground cover as critical in the protection against wind and water erosion. The goal should be to have your soil covered with at least 30% cover (dead or alive) all season long. Perhaps no one cares any more what you call it. Just use the great arsenal of equipment and technology that is out there and get it done. Hey, you might even use a plow (note 4 letter spelling) and if you quickly seeded a cover crop, 30% cover might be rapidly restored.

    Here are few other considerations:

    1. Leaving surfaces too rough in the fall means multiple passes in the spring and eventually less residue to conserve the soil. This is particularly challenging after low residue crops like soybeans.

    2. Vertical tillage tools have given producers a more complete arsenal of equipment that can prepare a seedbed while maintaining high residue levels. Target the use of these tools to still have 30 % cover after planting is complete.

    3. Producers determined to eliminate compaction and do some fall tillage should aim for a system that can leave significant residue in the fall such that after spring operations 30 % cover is still possible.

    4. A seedbed left relatively smooth with good residue cover can, on many lighter textured soils, be planted directly without any further residue reducing spring tillage.

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