Makintrax73
Member
Rented the farm to a different breed of farmer this year. He is doing “regenerative” farming a la Gabe Brown.
What I’m seeing in IL is that $1,000/ac gross revenue and $50/ac+ cash rent losses on CRP acres (at the low end we will see $100+ downside this year if corn prices stay above $5) have combined to make habitat a hard sell. What I hope is that new practices focused on profit (vs revenue) and sustainability over the long run might help habitat.
What my new tenant is doing this year: Winter rye was planted after harvest. On the corn ground it was terminated and non-gmo corn planted. Nothing unusual there. Next year we should see the rye go in a lot earlier with a high boy and retain more structure. This year it is almost rotted away at this point.
The real excitement is in the beans. He has companion cropped the beans right into growing winter rye. This is a highly unusual practice even among cover croppers. He says with some special equipment he can pull the rye out of the beans, and pick beans in Oct as normal. The dry weather appears to have stunted the beans in the rye, but we just got 5”. My hope here is this added plant structure provides some additional usable broding ground for my quail. I’m not sure it’s thick enough to nest in, but maybe I'm wrong there.
Further hope is less use of insecticides meaning more food for chicks, more worms, etc. Among other things this idea of regenerative farming favors no tillage, and minimal use of insecticides and herbicides. Speaking just from the bird perspective of course. We hope to see soil conservation and soil structure benefits in the long run, less chemical runoff, less nitrogen leaching etc.
Time will tell. Had a really bad weather event last year (snow then bitter cold). If my 1 covey survived I hope they make use of the additional cover and food.
What I’m seeing in IL is that $1,000/ac gross revenue and $50/ac+ cash rent losses on CRP acres (at the low end we will see $100+ downside this year if corn prices stay above $5) have combined to make habitat a hard sell. What I hope is that new practices focused on profit (vs revenue) and sustainability over the long run might help habitat.
What my new tenant is doing this year: Winter rye was planted after harvest. On the corn ground it was terminated and non-gmo corn planted. Nothing unusual there. Next year we should see the rye go in a lot earlier with a high boy and retain more structure. This year it is almost rotted away at this point.
The real excitement is in the beans. He has companion cropped the beans right into growing winter rye. This is a highly unusual practice even among cover croppers. He says with some special equipment he can pull the rye out of the beans, and pick beans in Oct as normal. The dry weather appears to have stunted the beans in the rye, but we just got 5”. My hope here is this added plant structure provides some additional usable broding ground for my quail. I’m not sure it’s thick enough to nest in, but maybe I'm wrong there.
Further hope is less use of insecticides meaning more food for chicks, more worms, etc. Among other things this idea of regenerative farming favors no tillage, and minimal use of insecticides and herbicides. Speaking just from the bird perspective of course. We hope to see soil conservation and soil structure benefits in the long run, less chemical runoff, less nitrogen leaching etc.
Time will tell. Had a really bad weather event last year (snow then bitter cold). If my 1 covey survived I hope they make use of the additional cover and food.
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