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FARMING NOTES

AVOID CROP FAILURES Contributed by C, R. Taylor, Local Organiser, Primary Production Council, Whakatane. October is one of the busiest months of the year for farmers who are growing crops., It is the main month in many districts for the sowing of mangels, sugar beet, carrots, the main crop of potatoes, pampas grass, and towards the end of the month maize, jiumpkins, millet, early rape and chou moellier. Final cultivation work for these and other crops to be sown- in November shouM be completed with as much despatch as possible. Three essential conditions for the successful establishment of crops are (1) adequate, thorough and early cultivation, (2) the use of good seed sown at the right time, and (3) the use of sufficient manure of the right kind. M S « ® Too frequently inadequate cultivation has been the cause of partial, or even complete, failure. All farmers intending to grow crops should take care to avoid this cause of crop failure. If a crop is worth groAving at all it is Avorth growing well. It does not pay to skimp the amount of cultivation or manure required to produce, for example, a 50-ton crop of mangels when, by skimping, a 25-ton crop is produced. Good seed is, of eouurse, essential, since seed of a low germination will be the cause of a poor "strike," while seed containing much impurity or seed of a poor strain or type will give an unsatisfactory crop. The sowing of sufficient manure with crops is necessary to secure proper establishment and development. The type and quantity of manure varies both Avith the crops and-with the soil requirements, but generally speaking, a phosphatic dressing gives good results. Particularly heav3 r dressings are required Avith potatoes, mangels and sugar beet. K ■ • 9

Two useful ond comparatively dis--ease-free crops are cliou moellier and mangels. Ghou Moellier is the least susceptible of the cruciferous crops to diseases and pests. If sown in October it may be fed off in February and used throughout the autumn period. II sown in December it may be utilised in the late autumn and throughout the winter. It is a useful fodder for all classes of stock and in this connection it could be more widely used for dairy cows on suitable soils. It is also used, though to a lesser degree than rape, as a fattening crop for sheep and lambs. It may be cut and fed out, or it may be fed off in 'breaks.' It i;j usually sown at the rate of l%lb to 21b per acre in 7-inch up to 28-inch drills, depending on its intended use and whether intercultivation is to be given. From 2 to 3 cwt of phosphatic manure usually gives the best results though this may be increased on poorer land, by the addition of lewt blood and bone, Ghou moellier should not be grown on very light or poor soils. » * • » Due to their high per acre yield on good land i. greater area of mangels could with advantage be grown annually in New Zealand. They are particularly valuable on dairy farms and stud stock farms. They require more labour than some crops because of thinning, intercultivation, pulling and stacking operations, but heavy yields on suitable land, make their culture worthwhile. Sowing should take place in October or November at the rate of 4 to 61bs to the acre in rows 27 inches apart. A dressing of 4 to f> cwt per acre of phosphatic manure (a mixture of superphosphate and blood and bone gives good results) is advisable with the possible addition of lewt of kainit on some soils. m » • » Ensilage. An ample supply of hay or silage or of crops allows a better utilisation of pastures. In those periods of the year when growth is slight or negligible, the farmer with inadequate reserves of feed has to punish his pasture severely to the particular detriment of the better species

of grasses and clovers. The severe grazing in turn causes a later growth of grass in the spring. Consequently, less paddocks are shut up for hay or silage in that season, or paddocks are shut up and cut at a later date, resulting in inferior quality hay or silage and a smaller aftermath. In other words, an insufficient reserve of tends to perpetuate itself and to cause inferior farm management. In many parts of New Zealand this year the winter has been a relatively favourable on-, for grass growth. Such a fa\ r ourable season gives farmers the opportunity not only to get ahead of their requirements of stock feed but also to improve their farm management. Reserves of feed may be built up, thus allowing a wiser use of pastures at all times of the year. In order to obtain the best silage from the best material, early closing and early cutting of the pad-* docks is" essential. Late ensilage is an undesirable practice. The paddocks to be used for haymaking should also be shut up before the end of October ready for cutting in November or December. For both hay and silage, the cured material should be made from leafy groAvth. Hay or siiage made from woody or fibrous material is of value only as a roughage or as a maintenance ration for dry stock, Avhereas leafy hay or sifage may be used with good results as a production ration for milking coavs and for breeding eAves, » m m *» An area of grass should be shut up for hay or silage that is sufficient to prevent the remaining pastures in use for grazing purposes from becoming too rank and mature for their best utilisation. It is better to save such grass as hay or silage rather than to let it go to waste as roughage. It is profitable to make the first cut of lucerne into silage, especially when oats or Italian ryegrass were drilled into the stand in the autumn. The weather is usually more uncertain at this period of the year and the first cut contains a bigger proportion of 'weeds. If a paddock of grass is available at the' same time for ensilage, this could be ensiled in conjunction with the lucerne.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19401007.2.7

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 2, Issue 222, 7 October 1940, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,033

FARMING NOTES Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 2, Issue 222, 7 October 1940, Page 3

FARMING NOTES Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 2, Issue 222, 7 October 1940, Page 3

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