I’m not a farmer, but it breaks my heart to see open uncovered soils. Erosion and flooding or standing water is in every field around me simply because the ground is like concrete due to disking.
Me also..north central Indiana. It's like...not many farmers care about what kinda ground they leave to the next generation or after that. Removing all fence rows and woods seems to be the farmers way around here. Makes them rich and animals homeless, and top soil washes away or blows away. Sad
Nobody had to spread lime when bison and elk roamed the plains. They used a John Deere to spread their own 😁
Makes good sense..
Haven't heard it put that way.
Now we can decide by what kind of soil we have. Good job.
I’m not a farmer, but it breaks my heart to see open uncovered soils. Erosion and flooding or standing water is in every field around me simply because the ground is like concrete due to disking.
Philip - me too!
Me also..north central Indiana.
It's like...not many farmers care about what kinda ground they leave to the next generation or after that.
Removing all fence rows and woods seems to be the farmers way around here. Makes them rich and animals homeless, and top soil washes away or blows away. Sad
@@timhatfield6367 yup, I am (born and raised) in Northeast Indiana.
Thanks for the information Grant
So if we had to use fertilizer, what would be the best to use...?
Jarret - this depends on the nutrients currently in the soil. It's best to do a soil test - check out WardLabs.com.