Boy, Andrew was showing his confidence in his driving the spraying machine he was driving really fast between the rows. And the plants are at a point where they need the nutrients to finish out their growing season. Great video Ryan....
Who would've dreamed this was required for a good corn crop. That ANDREW is worth his weight in GOLD... One terrific young man. We should achieve 300 K subscribers in short order. NICE JOB.
Corn is looking really good I can't believe how easily Andrew handles that machine as an old old farmer we didn't have anything like that in my day we probably would have had panic attacks trying to ruin it lol
Hey Ryan, your drone shots are amazing. It is awesome to see the entire process from all viewpoints- the ground, in the corn and above the corn. That Hagie sprayer make easy work of it. Have fun and stay safe. BTW I hope your head is ok.
Nice close up shots showing how the product is being placed directly adjoining the plants. And my goodness...Andrew, that's some fancy driving to tool through the field that fast and hold your line. Where'd you learn that? Turn 4 at Daytona? Nicely done, Sir!
Amazing what farmers are doing to get higher yields. And to think many feel that we need to go with what is call organic or sustainable. Corn like that will be taking in 5 to 7 lbs of nitrogen per day. Not to mention a lb of Sulfur. If you get behind it is too late.
Those Hagie's sure are nice machines... always been a fan of the front boom design-- SO much easier to see what you're doing and keep an eye on things, maneuver around obstacles, etc. Sure does a nice job with those Y-drops as well. Later and KUTGW! OL J R :)
If your in to this and already see the benefits look into the topcon crop spec sensors they give you real time variable rate by looking at the crop and adjusting the output to what the corn needs they can be run night or day they will take your n. app to a hole new level and you can see where your good spots and bad spots are and they tend to even the field out so your yield is more constant through out the field.
Ron B. Each year we adjust multiple factors as we work on increasing profitability. The yield boost varies due to multiple factors, but we tend to really increase yield on the lowest performing soils that have less nutrient holding capabilities.
EastTN Scott y drops get the nitrogen to the root zone faster and more efficiently than coulter bars. Putting the N at the base of the plant utilizes morning dew to funnel the water and nitrogen into the root zone even if you don’t get a rain soon after application
andrew tucker thanks for the reply. I have been spraying nitrogen in a backpack sprayer because I only grow small acres. I was curious if it was going to work. Thanks again
When the corn is that tall, the sprayer road wheels must be tough on the end-rows in the headlands. Soybeans you can sot-of float across but 5-ft corn stalks must take some casualties. Minor field damage in the headlands offset by better yields in the rest of the field is always part of the cost-benefit judgment.
They're attachments for sprayers that hang down between the rows to place the product at the base of the plant where they're readily absorbed through the roots!
I always love your drone footage Ryan, maybe its the music you put with it. Love your videos keep them coming Ryan and bope your getting some rain and no bad stuff !
Nicholas Hubbard I am then going to assume that “Auto Steer” is not accurate enough plus doesn’t factor in if the seed drill slides sideways on hills. Can’t fall asleep doing that job and also can’t spray at higher speeds 🤣😂
@@gavinperry7237 Exactly right, the gps doesn't know where the rows are, it just follows a line you make or your last pass. So you use the GPS as a guide to line yourself up with your rows by watching the screen and picking the closest set of rows to the line on the screen and then steering your way through them.
Bradley Choquette Travis got liquid potash on at V6 with the cultivator. There are many options other than KTS that are more economical or better forms of K.
@@andytuck13 That's very interesting... IN our neck of the woods, weren't getting our N levels to rise fertigating using Thio, but switching to KTS improved our K levels to a point that the plant would uptake N... Nebraska soils are not as weather as WI, and have cattle manure in the program; so overall, our K levels are really good till you start pushing above 280 bushels per acre. Thanks for the reply.
Probably... he didn't say it had the individual row shutoffs like the other sprayer they were using earlier in the season, and dribbling a little nitrogen fertilizer wouldn't hurt anything anyway, in fact it would stimulate the grass growth in the waterway to do a better job and grow more grass in there for hay later on... unlike when they were spraying herbicide which could kill the grass in the waterway, which is why the individual nozzle shutoffs are so handy-- keep the irregular waterway boundaries intact and growing grass! OL J R :)
A heavy dew will funnel down the leaves and incorporate the 32% as much of a pain as it is Y Dropping they do a great job of putting product right by the plant. Also 32% isn't like water and just evaporates it stays around for a while
Ryan around the 4;00 times in marker, you were climbing all over the sprayer I thought that you might have put yourself way out on one of the booms to get a better shot. Risky? Yes, but would have been a good shot, don't you think?? It's not worth it, but........
Booms can't support that kind of weight of a man out there on them in the field... they've got suspension and stuff to help even things out, but they'd be weighted down too much and be too low on that side and too high on the other. He *could* clip a go-pro mount out on a boom looking down or back or forward to toward the cab down the length of the boom or looking outwards, or whatever... OL J R :)
The cam showing Y drop application at the roots was great. Shows it being applied exactly where it’s needed
Boy, Andrew was showing his confidence in his driving the spraying machine he was driving really fast between the rows. And the plants are at a point where they need the nutrients to finish out their growing season. Great video Ryan....
Really good cinematography in this video, love the verdant fields contrasting the yellow in the machine.
Who would've dreamed this was required for a good corn crop. That ANDREW is worth his weight in GOLD... One terrific young man. We should achieve 300 K subscribers in short order. NICE JOB.
Nice of him to let you ride along. Crop is looking good
Thank you for the short video! Love em under 10 minutes
Doing a good job as always, Andrew.
The drone footage is always so sweet thanks Ryan fields looking good
The overhead shot around the 5 minute mark looks like a toy on a piece of astroturf, perfect color, perfect straight lines.
Corn is looking really good I can't believe how easily Andrew handles that machine as an old old farmer we didn't have anything like that in my day we probably would have had panic attacks trying to ruin it lol
Andrew is amazing, what an asset to the farmers. Great video Ryan!
I did notice the 46 by the bulk truck. Thank you for the ride along.
Hey Ryan, your drone shots are amazing. It is awesome to see the entire process from all viewpoints- the ground, in the corn and above the corn. That Hagie sprayer make easy work of it. Have fun and stay safe. BTW I hope your head is ok.
That corn is looking Excellent this year. Lets just hope the weather stays cooperative this year.
Speed is everything
Hey Ryan thanks for the video corn looks great hope you guys get the right amount of rain you need 👍
Thanks for the vid guys..
The drone piloting was on point lol
First time see this machine
Andrew should make agronomy videos like bushel Billy. Love hearing from him
This many people liked this video before watching
👇🏼
Time has flown, I recall you doing this last season.
Pretty interesting all the stuff ya get to do
What happened to the side of your head?
Nice close up shots showing how the product is being placed directly adjoining the plants. And my goodness...Andrew, that's some fancy driving to tool through the field that fast and hold your line. Where'd you learn that? Turn 4 at Daytona? Nicely done, Sir!
You got some neat shots in this video.
To see a sprayer working in tall corn without running it over is awesome👍😁
Amazing what farmers are doing to get higher yields. And to think many feel that we need to go with what is call organic or sustainable. Corn like that will be taking in 5 to 7 lbs of nitrogen per day. Not to mention a lb of Sulfur. If you get behind it is too late.
Great drone filming!
How fast is that sprayer going? Looks like he is moving through those rows. Lol!
James Rounding averaging around 10mph
@@andytuck13 pretty fast!
Those Hagie's sure are nice machines... always been a fan of the front boom design-- SO much easier to see what you're doing and keep an eye on things, maneuver around obstacles, etc. Sure does a nice job with those Y-drops as well. Later and KUTGW! OL J R :)
Hi, Ryan great video
fenomenal
If your in to this and already see the benefits look into the topcon crop spec sensors they give you real time variable rate by looking at the crop and adjusting the output to what the corn needs they can be run night or day they will take your n. app to a hole new level and you can see where your good spots and bad spots are and they tend to even the field out so your yield is more constant through out the field.
How much of a yield increase have you seen with using the the y drops.
Ron B. Each year we adjust multiple factors as we work on increasing profitability. The yield boost varies due to multiple factors, but we tend to really increase yield on the lowest performing soils that have less nutrient holding capabilities.
Is y drops better than a nitrogen bar for the sprayer or just different?I saw Cole the cornstar using one the other day.
EastTN Scott y drops get the nitrogen to the root zone faster and more efficiently than coulter bars. Putting the N at the base of the plant utilizes morning dew to funnel the water and nitrogen into the root zone even if you don’t get a rain soon after application
andrew tucker thanks for the reply. I have been spraying nitrogen in a backpack sprayer because I only grow small acres. I was curious if it was going to work. Thanks again
Awesome video looks like i was the first to see it.
When the corn is that tall, the sprayer road wheels must be tough on the end-rows in the headlands. Soybeans you can sot-of float across but 5-ft corn stalks must take some casualties. Minor field damage in the headlands offset by better yields in the rest of the field is always part of the cost-benefit judgment.
Ok so I'm not a farmer but love your content. I have a question, What is Y-dropping
They're attachments for sprayers that hang down between the rows to place the product at the base of the plant where they're readily absorbed through the roots!
They're putting Nitrogen down
The tubes that come down from the sprayer and apply the product take the form of the letter Y.
I always love your drone footage Ryan, maybe its the music you put with it. Love your videos keep them coming Ryan and bope your getting some rain and no bad stuff !
I sure miss that job wish i could still be doing it keep safe
Ever find one of those sink holes while spraying????
Nutrien check out that stock good dividend also
Ryan do you do side by side comparison to see the yeild difference of applying that vs not applying?
It looks like you are moving the steering wheel. Do you not use Auto Steer ?
No because they are following the rows to keep from running over corn
Nicholas Hubbard I am then going to assume that “Auto Steer” is not accurate enough plus doesn’t factor in if the seed drill slides sideways on hills. Can’t fall asleep doing that job and also can’t spray at higher speeds 🤣😂
@@gavinperry7237 Exactly right, the gps doesn't know where the rows are, it just follows a line you make or your last pass. So you use the GPS as a guide to line yourself up with your rows by watching the screen and picking the closest set of rows to the line on the screen and then steering your way through them.
Joel Vollmer yep unless you pay for a higher accuracy greenstar then it knows where the rows are
Saw the tissue test video- why didn't you use KTS (potassium Thiosulfate) instead of ammonium Thiosulfate?
Bradley Choquette Travis got liquid potash on at V6 with the cultivator. There are many options other than KTS that are more economical or better forms of K.
@@andytuck13 That's very interesting... IN our neck of the woods, weren't getting our N levels to rise fertigating using Thio, but switching to KTS improved our K levels to a point that the plant would uptake N... Nebraska soils are not as weather as WI, and have cattle manure in the program; so overall, our K levels are really good till you start pushing above 280 bushels per acre. Thanks for the reply.
Dose the Hagie drop product when crossingwater ways.
Probably... he didn't say it had the individual row shutoffs like the other sprayer they were using earlier in the season, and dribbling a little nitrogen fertilizer wouldn't hurt anything anyway, in fact it would stimulate the grass growth in the waterway to do a better job and grow more grass in there for hay later on... unlike when they were spraying herbicide which could kill the grass in the waterway, which is why the individual nozzle shutoffs are so handy-- keep the irregular waterway boundaries intact and growing grass! OL J R :)
What is the name of the music/song you are using?
It looks like Andrew has done that a time or two before
This we're you really want to know where your tires are at! Looks cool but scary!
Which music did you use?
super brother
Hey Ryan!! Great video! How fast was Andrew going?
Darrin Lull about 10mph
Hi
Boy I had always heard that was something Scottish people ate on New Years
Alf anderson II Do you mean Haggis?
@@farmerfrank5403 It was a joke a play on words
What happens when it doesn’t rain....and all that investment in application and 32% ends up evaporating into the air ...
A heavy dew will funnel down the leaves and incorporate the 32% as much of a pain as it is Y Dropping they do a great job of putting product right by the plant. Also 32% isn't like water and just evaporates it stays around for a while
Were is
Hannah?
Ryan around the 4;00 times in marker, you were climbing all over the sprayer I thought that you might have put yourself way out on one of the booms to get a better shot. Risky? Yes, but would have been a good shot, don't you think?? It's not worth it, but........
Booms can't support that kind of weight of a man out there on them in the field... they've got suspension and stuff to help even things out, but they'd be weighted down too much and be too low on that side and too high on the other. He *could* clip a go-pro mount out on a boom looking down or back or forward to toward the cab down the length of the boom or looking outwards, or whatever... OL J R :)
Hi