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Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station
Приєднався 4 сер 2022
The channel for the Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station (MOAES) at the University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources (CAFNR). MOAES extends CAFNR research to nearly 14,000 acres across Missouri to meet the regional needs of agricultural producers and natural resource managers.
Tim's Take Episode 31 | Derek Brake | Does Animal Physiology Impact Feed Requirements? Part 2
In this video, Tim Reinbott continues his conversation with Dr. Derek Brake on the vast, upcoming research project with regard to the physical shape (surface area) of a cow and how that relates to the animal's caloric needs and growth. Learn how this project is looking to optimize the current system and also improve the tools available for the future.
Visit moaes.missouri.edu/ to learn more.
#mizzou #microplastics #farming
The Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station (MOAES) extends CAFNR research to nearly 14,000 acres across the state to meet regional research and demonstration needs of agricultural producers and natural resource managers. MOAES has a storied history of major impacts in advancing science in agriculture, food and natural resources - locally, nationally and globally. These CAFNR laboratories provide research faculty with a wide variety of real-world conditions to test and develop strategies for agricultural production based on the geographical and climatic differences of our diverse state.
Visit moaes.missouri.edu/ to learn more.
#mizzou #microplastics #farming
The Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station (MOAES) extends CAFNR research to nearly 14,000 acres across the state to meet regional research and demonstration needs of agricultural producers and natural resource managers. MOAES has a storied history of major impacts in advancing science in agriculture, food and natural resources - locally, nationally and globally. These CAFNR laboratories provide research faculty with a wide variety of real-world conditions to test and develop strategies for agricultural production based on the geographical and climatic differences of our diverse state.
Переглядів: 8
Відео
Tim's Take Episode 31 | Derek Brake | Does Animal Physiology Impact Feed Requirements? Part 1
Переглядів 3721 годину тому
Did you know that the feed requirements of a cow differ by the physical shape of the cow? There is a better way to determine the feed requirement of a cow other than by weight alone. Dr. Derek Brake joins Tim Reinbott in this month's podcast talking about the new, exciting, research project. Visit moaes.missouri.edu/ to learn more. #mizzou #microplastics #farming The Missouri Agricultural Exper...
Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!
Переглядів 921 годину тому
From all of us at the Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station UA-cam Channel and Tim's Take, Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year. Thank you for taking the time to watch our videos this past year, and we hope you continue to subscribe and follow us this coming year as we have some exciting new videos lined up. Visit moaes.missouri.edu/ to learn more. #mizzou #microplastics #farming The Missouri...
MU MOAES Communications Summer Worker
Переглядів 3614 днів тому
For the past two summers, the MO AES Communications team has had MU students helping with the Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station UA-cam Channel, Facebook and Instagram accounts to create content. It has been a good experience for both MO AES Communications and for the students. If you are an MU student and would be interested in working for the MO AES Communications team over the summer, ...
Revolutionizing Pasture Management: William Lee's Research on Grain Sorghum and Livestock Grazing
Переглядів 70321 день тому
In this video, Tim Reinbott visits graduate student William Lee to discuss his exciting research project on grain sorghum. William shares insights into his plans to simulate grazing with livestock during the fall and winter months, exploring how this can benefit pasture management. Join us for an engaging look at William’s research and its potential benefits for sustainable agriculture! Don’t f...
Tim's Take Episode 30 | Plastics In Our Soil! Part Two
Переглядів 5628 днів тому
Join Tim Reinbott as he continues his visit with Dr. Salehi and her PhD student, Dibya Datta, in part two of their discussion on the impacts of using plastic, specifically in agriculture and in our water sources. Video Part One: ua-cam.com/video/RohNp3xAR4k/v-deo.html Audio Podcast: mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/r6vcvf6cnfw787c5/Tims_Take_30_Audio_Podcastb4wyw.mp3 Visit moaes.missouri.edu/ to learn m...
Tim's Take Episode 30 | Plastics In Our Soil! Part One
Переглядів 226Місяць тому
Join Tim as he visits with Dr. Salehi and her PhD student, Dibya Datta, and discusses the issues we are facing concerning the use of plastics. They are convenient and helpful to farmers in many ways... holding up to various weather conditions without rot, easy to use, and cheap, but are they costing us more than we realize? Video Part Two: ua-cam.com/video/3BilH0y5n7k/v-deo.html Audio Podcast: ...
Bulk Density Soil Sampling
Переглядів 47Місяць тому
Bulk density is another way to measure the health of your soil. Join Tim Reinbott and Kat Langan as they demonstrate how to perform bulk density soil sampling. Visit moaes.missouri.edu/ to learn more. #mizzou #farming #soilhealth #soil The Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station (MOAES) extends CAFNR research to nearly 14,000 acres across the state to meet regional research and demonstration n...
Inside Foremost Dairy Farm: Harvesting Corn Silage for Optimal Cattle Nutrition!
Переглядів 229Місяць тому
Join us at Foremost Dairy Farm with farm manager Adam Shetley as we dive into the corn silage harvesting process! Discover how this vital feed makes up 60% of cattle diets and learn about ideal fermentation times and moisture monitoring. We also discuss sustainable practices like cover cropping and how they enhance nutrition for heifers and lactating cows. Subscribe for more insights into innov...
Annuals and Perennial Cover Crops Incorporated with Vegetables
Переглядів 83Місяць тому
Curious about how cover crops affect organic farming? Join us as we explore a study from the University of Missouri and Lincoln University comparing annual and perennial cover crops. We’re testing which method best improves soil health, biomass, and weed control. 🔍 Highlights: Annual Cover Crops: Sorghum sedan and legume mix. Perennial Cover Crops: Cool-season grasses and legumes. Findings: Bot...
What Innovative Techniques Are Being Used in Sustainable Vegetable Farming?
Переглядів 118Місяць тому
What Innovative Techniques Are Being Used in Sustainable Vegetable Farming?
Tim's Take Episode 29 | Part Two - How Do I Feed Corn Silage to My Cattle?
Переглядів 562 місяці тому
Tim's Take Episode 29 | Part Two - How Do I Feed Corn Silage to My Cattle?
Tim's Take Episode 29 | Part One - How Do I Feed Corn Silage to My Cattle?
Переглядів 1422 місяці тому
Tim's Take Episode 29 | Part One - How Do I Feed Corn Silage to My Cattle?
Spotlight Jamie Courter | Friends Helping Friends, Farmers Helping Farmers
Переглядів 762 місяці тому
Spotlight Jamie Courter | Friends Helping Friends, Farmers Helping Farmers
Revolutionizing Farming: Dr. Noel Aloysius' Off-Grid System for High-Value Crops!
Переглядів 5612 місяці тому
Revolutionizing Farming: Dr. Noel Aloysius' Off-Grid System for High-Value Crops!
Tim's Take Episode 28 | Benjamin Brown Agricultural Economics Part 2
Переглядів 393 місяці тому
Tim's Take Episode 28 | Benjamin Brown Agricultural Economics Part 2
Tim's Take Episode 28 | Benjamin Brown Agricultural Economics Part One
Переглядів 593 місяці тому
Tim's Take Episode 28 | Benjamin Brown Agricultural Economics Part One
Perennial Cover Crops & Solar Corridor🌾🌽
Переглядів 2693 місяці тому
Perennial Cover Crops & Solar Corridor🌾🌽
Horticulture and Agroforestry Research Farm's Educational Building | A Dream Come True
Переглядів 1023 місяці тому
Horticulture and Agroforestry Research Farm's Educational Building | A Dream Come True
Tim's Take Episode 27 | Mark Coggeshall Part Two
Переглядів 463 місяці тому
Tim's Take Episode 27 | Mark Coggeshall Part Two
Tim's Take Episode 27 | Mark Coggeshall Part One
Переглядів 334 місяці тому
Tim's Take Episode 27 | Mark Coggeshall Part One
Integrated Pest Management Field Day 2024
Переглядів 514 місяці тому
Integrated Pest Management Field Day 2024
Tim's Take Episode 26 | Dr. Temple Grandin Visual Thinking Part Two
Переглядів 2255 місяців тому
Tim's Take Episode 26 | Dr. Temple Grandin Visual Thinking Part Two
Tim's Take Episode 26 | Dr. Temple Grandin Visual Thinking Part One
Переглядів 1125 місяців тому
Tim's Take Episode 26 | Dr. Temple Grandin Visual Thinking Part One
Southwest REEC Welcomes Kaylin and Eric Onboard
Переглядів 255 місяців тому
Southwest REEC Welcomes Kaylin and Eric Onboard
My rare fish portfolio has tripled in the last year alone, people are sleeping on these ponds.
Great focus. We have done this on our farm with excellent results. Will the study include soil health measurements? Pounds of produce yield is not the best measurement. Nutrition profile, bacteria to fungal ratio, and other indicators would be of interest. Nit being critical. I wish I had the ability to test my garden and orchard plots for several indicators of overall health. Thanks for what you are doing.
Great job Aloysius, congrats.
Great workout. Congratulations
Congratulations in your new invention Ramesh❤
Before I get accused of talking out my backend..... no, i am NOT a corn farmer.🤪 Just a couple of ²observations. That Bayer variety with narrow (lesser?) leaf but greater root mass just doesn't make sense to my little brain. Seems to me that there is a natural ratio of leaf to root. I don't see how you can lower that ratio without interfering with stalk, ear and pollen production. The first two seem obvious so I'll just put out my 'no experience' idea and say that pollen, being very high in protein and complex compounds, requires a lot of physiological "effort". That effort requires a lot of photosynthesis, right? I mean that leaf is not only growing/ sustaining the root mass but also the stalk and the developing ear. I dont see how the plant can do more with less, in this instance. Just sounds like fast talking seed salesman talk. Please comment. On planting into clover....why the need to spray in order "clear out" the furrow for planting corn? Can't you block off an appropriate number of drop tubes when planting clover so as to that strip is devoid of clover? Of course, you would have to match the blocked clover tubes to correspond to the opener on the corn planter, right? Last, rather than trying to calculate correct dosage of herbicide to just "set back", but not kill clover couldn't you use a propane flame weeder or spray ag vinegar? Seems like it would be mighty hard to overdo either one to the point of outright killing the clover. I'd appreciate any INFORMATIVE comments. Thanks
Interesting
The strategy described at the 14:00 mark seems like a lot of effort when Korean lespedeza does the same thing but better (in every regard) on top of reseeding itself...
we have a farm in newton county how do i get involved in your study farms
Thank you
Big shout-out from Schulenburg Texas👍great info.
I am grazing maize during summer. Which one is better quality (ME and protein)?
Would love to know what the average daily gain on a stocker steer is in grain sorghum.
So fascinating!
3:07 min 35 days after planting, Sunn Hemp leaves have 26% crude protein.
Can. It be feed to horses
Could you mix all 3 together in a seed blend?
Speaking as an ag professional who has done research in this area, we should never have allowed the growing of crops and the utilization of the finite resource of phosphorus to go for the production of fuel. Phosphorus is finite on this planet and it's also not one of those minerals that has a seemingly endless supply of; we need all that we have for food production - NOT fuel!
we have a farm in Missouri how do I get involved in trials
Promo_SM
Great thinking
How much are you drying the hemp before bailing?
When is the best time to plant in missouri
Tim Reinbott said, “Sunflowers are a warm season crops so I would plant from the end of May through July. It normally takes around 60 days from emergence to bloom.”
@@MOAES awesome thanks
is this open to the public?
Great info
Very good interview and research 👌 thankyou
Thank you for these updates. Did you mention the seeding rates for Sunn Hemp & corn silage?
What fertilizer program did you use. Herbicides etc.?
@@ttanne7838 between 20-40 lbs per acre....no fertilizer, no herbicides. From my understanding of watching the videos.
Moderate nitrogen rates and waiting for a hard freeze to completely kill the plants reduces the prussic acid risks.
Sorghum is very difficult to graze with livestock because of pursic acid that forms especially if plants are under stress of drought causes bloat even mortality in cattle silage making is a better option
In Ohio, would the lab that Albrecht set up be Brookside labs? In New Knoxville? Now New Bremen.
If you are seeding on 30 inch rows why not try broadcasting with red clover before canopy, that’d provide plenty of protein for grazing.
Maybe herbicide carryover?
Maybe light requirements. The examples I have seen use cowpeas for protein.
Try some test plots with multi species cover crop
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Don't feed those round bales to livestock! They won't get a square meal! Nyuk nyuk nyuk! 🏃.............................
In diverse mixes all plants can fix nitrogen via free living n fixation bacteria. No legumes required. The Jena experiment. This is how it happens in Nature
Can you plant it in Central fl.?
Yes.
Yes, My cattle are grazing some now in Pasco county. Grows best planted in summer.
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Ty
It does well.
So how does it grind
If you wait too long your in big trouble. But it’s fine if you get it at the right time.
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Could this planted with corn silage? Same row or alternate rows?
Perhaps you interseed between rows?
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
An out dated product looking for buyers. Just because it grows don’t make i5 work out. Even granddad knew better. Stay safe.
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Harley shared the following information with us, so we could share it with you in the comments. Red Clover Cool season biennial legume (does not persist; does not produce during dry/summer months) Seed cost $3.25/lb (current Missouri seed dealer; 12/11/2023) Broadcast seeding rate 12 lb/ac $3.25*12 = $39.00/ac seed cost Average forage production (MU variety trials) 1.4 tons/ac $39.00/1.4 = $27.86/ton of forage Drill seeding rate 8 lb/ac $3.25*8 = $26.00/ac $26.00/1.4 = $18.57/ton of forage Sunn Hemp Warm season annual legume (does not persist; produces during dry summer months) Seed cost $2.70/lb (current Missouri seed dealer; 12/11/2023) Drill seeding rate 30 lb/ac $2.70*30 = $81/ac seed cost Average forage production (MU research data) 4.4 tons/ac $81/4.4 = $18.41/ton of forage So, sunn hemp is an economically sound option for increasing forage production during the summer slump.
Thank you for your questions and interest! We will be creating a follow-up video to answer those questions, so make sure you subscribe to our UA-cam channel to be notified when the video goes live.
Why $$$ sunn hemp instead of sweet clover??
coumarin
@@delprice3007 there are low coumarin varieties and early immature harvest produces very low levels. Problem arises with big bales put up late & wet. Perfect example of why maximum harvested tonnage is often poor mgmt choice.
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Those windrows don’t look like 4 ton DM yield. Do you mean wet 4 tons?
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
How do you plant
With a drill.
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
clover is cheaper with more nutritional value and regrows the next year.
The seed is about $2 a pound. Planted on July 10th and harvested on September 5. 55 days later during the hottest time of the year 4.5 tons of production. It also produces 100 pounds of nitrogen per acre. Its roots bring P and K up to the root zone.
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Too bad the seed costs is very high.
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
Please share the test results of the hay?
Here is the link to the video with the results and more: ua-cam.com/video/zsMKlycj0K4/v-deo.html
I remember following this tornado on radar and watching Brandon Copics livestream. This was a giant tornado. Luckily it wasnt incredibly strong.
Well done! Thanks for the electronic tour
I absolutely love 🌻 ☀ 🌻
Wow really cool💛🌻