Very interesting publication on the phenomena of allelopathy. Check out chapter 3 to read more about the specifics of allelopathic chemicals from different small grains.
Very interesting publication on the phenomena of allelopathy. Check out chapter 3 to read more about the specifics of allelopathic chemicals from different small grains.
![]() BLUE CORN–Richard Pratt, NMSU professor and head of the Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, examines an ear of blue corn in a plot at NMSU’s Agricultural Science Center at Los Lunas. He is coordinating field trials at several of the university’s agricultural science centers around the state in a project aimed at making new organic corn varieties available to producers within the next few years. (Courtesy photo.) |
Richard Pratt is standing in a field at New Mexico State University’s Leyendecker Plant Science Research Center south of Las Cruces talking about his corn research. Two things are worth mentioning here. One is that there’s not a cornstalk in sight. The other is that Pratt, who recently finished up his first year as head of the NMSU Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, has time for research.
The absence of corn is easy to explain. It’s February in southern New Mexico and the corn has all been harvested. The particular plot Pratt is standing in is greening up with hairy vetch, a winter cover crop being rotated in as part of that field’s three-year transition from traditional agriculture to certified organic status.
Finding time for the research, as busy as Pratt is with administrative responsibilities, is not easy but it is essential. He brought a large grant with him when he moved to NMSU from Ohio State University and is committed to expanding the project in his new Western environment.
Pratt’s research at Leyendecker and other NMSU agricultural science centers is part of a larger project titled “Strengthening public corn breeding to ensure organic farmers’ access to elite cultivars.” The organic corn breeding project involves a half-dozen researchers in several states and Puerto Rico. The team is evaluating existing varieties of organic corn for their viability in varied climates and developing new and better varieties through traditional breeding practices.
Pratt and colleagues are not doing their organic corn trials for a large seed company. Such companies currently have little interest in funding development of specialty crops like organic corn, according to Pratt; they tend to focus their investment on developing varieties that will appeal to very large numbers of producers.
This project is funded by a USDA Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative grant. Pratt’s share of the grant is approximately $450,000 for the four-year project, which is slated to end in 2014.
Cover crops are growing! If you’ve seen some bright green fields around the countryside then you are probably seeing some winter rye or winter wheat cover crops that farmers planted last fall. This picture was taken near Malcom, IA March 27, 2012. 45 farmers, NRCS and FSA personal joined the Iowa Learning Farms and PFI staff at the farm of Joe Kriegel to learn about cover crops. Joe spoke about seeding cover crops following corn silage harvest. He was able to get good growth from tillage radish and sweet clover last fall when drilled after corn silage harvest. Joe also plans to harvest the winter rye for grain this summer and then have seed for his own fields and fields he custom drills. He is planning to grow tillage radish after rye harvest and then plant corn in 2013 without any nitrogen. Joe invited everyone back to his farm to see how things turn out.
COVER CROP FIELD DAYS Will continue Thursday March, 28 in Calumet; Tuesday April 3 at Nashua; Wednesday April 4 at Crawfordsville and Thursday April 5 at Lewis. Please contact the PFI office if you have more questions: 515-232-5661
On Tuesday January 10, 2012, the 2012 Winter Farminar Series began. 41 folks tuned in live to learn from farmer Jerry Peckumn and his accountant Leo Brooker, both of Jefferson, IA.
Attendees learned the potential tax savings of filing with a knowledgeable adviser to help take advantage of all the tax credits and techniques available to legally reduce tax liabilities for farmers.
Good recordkeeping was also stressed by Jerry including using a bookkeeping service if you don’t enjoy doing it yourself. Use cost accounting and cash to accrual conversions annually to really know how much the farm is making by looking at net worth overtime. Know how much you have in inventory from year to year and what the value lost from depreciating assets. Avoiding the temptation to make large capital expenditures and depreciate the full value of the asset in the first year was also encouraged as this might not lead the business to the best outcome over time.
Watch the complete recording of this session online now by clicking on this link!
Farminars continue to draw 25% of attendees from outside of Iowa and they have a committed, eager audience from around Iowa and as far away as Homer, Alaska!
Please join us next week for “Scale and Profit: a financial snapshot of three CSAs” Tuesday January 17, 2012.
Supported by the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, USDA, Grant # 2010-49400-21843
Jeremy and Kelly Gustafson and Jeremy’s father Steve and uncle Larry hosted 60 farmers and NRCS and IDALS staffers to their farm at the end of corn harvest in Boone County on October 27, 2011.