I agree but here is what the farmer thinks-If we take precision ag one step further and idle unproductive acres, there is where we could get some improvement for our birds. Turning those acres into continuous CRP would help.
I read an article in Quail Unlimited's magazine once about a farmer who used the GPS function on his combine back when it was a new thing. He found out that the unproductive acres in this particular crop field caused the entire field to be unprofitable. By idling the unproductive acres he made the remaining acres profitable and received CRP payments for the acres that he idled. Nothing is all one way or all the other. However I do think that there are enough of those acres out there that idling them in some gamebird favorable cover would show a significant increase in bird numbers across their range.I agree but here is what the farmer thinks-
I know it's not productive ground but it takes time money and equipment to do something different then plant it. Is it really worth it ?
If I put it into crp it will catch snow and then it's wet around it later in the spring so I can't plant it as early. So there again I have to ask is it worth it ?
Now many of us want to ask the farmer if what they are doing is really worth it ?
Raise so much that without price supports(welfare) they couldn't make a profit?
The federal ag program needs a major overhaul.
Here is the really stupid thing about crp payments- crp pays more to take productive land out of production then say pasture ground.I read an article in Quail Unlimited's magazine once about a farmer who used the GPS function on his combine back when it was a new thing. He found out that the unproductive acres in this particular crop field caused the entire field to be unprofitable. By idling the unproductive acres he made the remaining acres profitable and received CRP payments for the acres that he idled. Nothing is all one way or all the other. However I do think that there are enough of those acres out there that idling them in some gamebird favorable cover would show a significant increase in bird numbers across their range.
I guess one of the misnomers that I am guilty of is using the word idling. When you idle a piece of ground you quit using the natural pressures that make that habitat functional. We need a CRP that pays at least as much as the owner would make while farming or grazing it, and it needs to include the necessary manipulations to keep it in good condition. That would either need to be covered by the payment or there should be a payment for that manipulation.Here is the really stupid thing about crp payments- crp pays more to take productive land out of production then say pasture ground.
Friend told me he tried to enroll some no longer needed pasture in crp. No crp money available for pasture ground. He plowed and planted those acres took a loss and collected on crop insurance. He farmed it 2 more years with almost the same results. He tells me the rest of that quarter , about 90 acres is , productive ground . He again asked about putting the former pasture into crp and was given a low figure. He was then told if he put both pieces in he would get about 40% more per acre.
My guess the pasture was never in the farm program or had no base. He needed to farm it to creat a value. He knew it was crap so that’s why he didn’t farm it. His CRP payment where based on grazing prices not farming itHere is the really stupid thing about crp payments- crp pays more to take productive land out of production then say pasture ground.
Friend told me he tried to enroll some no longer needed pasture in crp. No crp money available for pasture ground. He plowed and planted those acres took a loss and collected on crop insurance. He farmed it 2 more years with almost the same results. He tells me the rest of that quarter , about 90 acres is , productive ground . He again asked about putting the former pasture into crp and was given a low figure. He was then told if he put both pieces in he would get about 40% more per acre.