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12th Annual
No-Till On The Plains
2008 Winter Conference Tuesday and Wednesday, January 29-30, 2008
at the
Bicentennial Center, Salina, KS

Conference Agenda and Schedule
Conference Exhibitors
The 12th annual No-Till on the Plains Winter Conference has
evolved into the most respected “continuous no-till” conference and trade
show of its type in
North America.
At the 2008 Winter Conference, you will have the opportunity to visit with
other no-tillers from various regions. This year, about one dozen
“producer speakers” -- each in a different stage of continuous no-till (CNT) with a variety of unique conditions – will offer
presentations. In addition, another dozen no-tillage experts – some of
the world's foremost authorities in no-tillage systems, will engage the
crowd. The all-star lineup features names such as Amado,
Anderson, Beck, Bieber,
Brown, Cott, Duiker, Forgey, Frenzen, Gadzia, Hatfield, Holle, Humburg,
Jasa, Mindemann, Needham, Nichols, Ruwoldt, Smith, Ward, Watson, and
Wiltse.
These
experts are the most knowledgeable no-till aficianoadoes, and growers will
have the opportunity to ask questions, share trade secrets and interact
with other attendees, participants and presenters.
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2008 AIM
Symposium was held on Thursday, Jan. 31,
2008
The premise of the AIM
Symposium is to CHALLENGE THE INNOVATORS.
Over 150 people attended the
symposium and heard valuable cover crop information from Gabe Brown, Ken
Miller, Kris Nichols, Gary Maskus, Telmo Amado, and Mark Watson.
The primary goal of this meeting was to accelerate the learning curve
concerning soil health, cover crops and crop rotations while remaining
profitable. Producers left this meeting with an improved understanding
of cover crops, crop rotations, and how to kick-start the biology in
their systems.
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Winter Conference 2008
Photo Gallery
Click any picture for a larger view! |
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The best No-Till trade show in North America! |
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Over 1200 people were in attendance at the 2008 Winter Conference |
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Scheduled
Speakers include: |
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Thanks to all of
our outstanding speakers!
2008 Winter Conference Speakers and
No-Till on the Plains Board Members.
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Telmo
Amado, University of Santa Maria, Brazil
Brazilian No-till: Last advances in soil
carbon management and improvements in cropping systems
Since the 90’s no-till had
a fast farm adoption in Brazil achieving more than 24 millions of
hectares. In tropical and subtropical climate the requirement for soil
crop residue input is much higher than in temperate environment. This
demand had been supplied by an intensive cover crops and crop rotation
systems -- new tools as precision agriculture has been useful to improve
cropping systems management.
Dr. Telmo Jorge Carneiro Amado is a Full
Professor of Soil Conservation at the Federal University of Santa Maria in
RS Brazil. He obtained his Ph.D. in Soil Science, Federal University of
Rio Grande do Sul / Auburn Univ., 1997. His research area of
specialization is no-tillage systems, carbon sequestration in agriculture,
cover crops and soil rehabilitation, soil quality, residue management,
water and wind erosion control, tropical agriculture, sustainable
agriculture, nitrogen cycle. Telmo is on sabbatical at
KSU and is currently an adjunct faculty member there.
Taking
Stock of the Brazilian "Zero-Till Revolution": A Review Of Landmark
Research and Farmers' Practice |
Randy
Anderson, USDA ARS, Brookings, SD
A New Approach to Weed
Management, Based on Population Dynamics
Crop diversity and no-till can help producers expand their approach in
managing weeds. In the Central Great Plains, management that includes
cultural tactics to disrupt population growth of weeds requires 50% less
inputs and cost to control weeds. Our presentation will describe this
approach that is reducing the need for herbicides in cropping systems.

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Dwayne
Beck, Dakota Lakes Research Farm
Let Mother (nature) Do It
Dwayne Beck, manager of Dakota Lakes Research Farm, Pierre,
S.D., has been studying farming systems for both irrigated and dryland. In addition to updating us on his latest research results
and rotational ideas, Dwayne will also focus on how the most
important crop nutrient, carbon, can be managed effectively only in
no-till.

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Rick
Bieber, Trail City, South Dakota No-Till Producer
Economics of Rotations in
No-Till Dryland Farming
Rick Bieber is a no-till
farmer from north central South Dakota. He farms in a 16 inch
precipitation zone on 5000 acres of cropland and also has 5000 acres of
rangeland for a 400 head cow/calf operation. He has been in a continuous
no-till system for the past 21 years with main crops of hard red spring
wheat, hard red winter wheat, corn, flax, peas, soybeans, sunflowers, safflower , and
alfalfa. Rick is intensely interested in keeping the farm operation
economically viable and gets to the heart of a problem quickly before it
becomes major. Rick is a strong advocate of diverse crop rotations and
profitability for successful no-till systems and has been a popular
speaker at a number of no-till conferences throughout the Northern Great
Plains and Pacific Northwest of the United States over the past 16 years.
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"WHEN I GIVE THE MORTGAGE TO MY SONS
THEY SHOULD NOT ASK: “WHERE’S THE SOIL?” "
Henry Bieber
This statement was made by my Grandfather in 1958 to the United
States Senate when asked to testify on the need for conservation
offices throughout the USA. So the passion to treat the soil
with respect has been taught through the generations on our farm.
My great grandfather immigrated from Ukraine to the USA in 1909,
bringing with him his family and the strong desire to have a better
life and instilling in his children the need to respect God’s lands
that we get to tend for our short tenure upon this earth.
Rick Bieber |
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Gabe
Brown, Bismarck, North Dakota
Integrating Livestock in a No-Till Cropping
System
Gabe and Shelly Brown own and operate Brown’s
Gelbvieh Ranch, located 2 miles east of Bismarck, ND. The Brown’s
purchased the ranch in 1991 and built a 250 head purebred cow operation.
The Brown’s started working toward a sustainable cropping system after
purchasing a no-till drill in 1994. Gabe enjoys exploring legumes
that can be used in both his livestock grazing system and the no-till
cropping system, using soil health as the fertility indicator. This ND
producer will enlighten you with his practical application utilizing
continuous no-till crops and livestock in an extreme environment. This
amazing farmer-rancher will become one of your favorites as you profit
from his experiences.
The Thrill of
Competition - Leading Edge Featured Farmer: Gabe Brown
Kenneth
Miller, Burleigh County North Dakota Soil Conservation District
Kenneth Miller is a a farmer/rancher and a
District Technician with the Burleigh County Soil Conservation District in
Bismarck, North Dakota who works with clients to design & install planned
grazing systems, the EQIP program and the District no-till program. Ken
has 35 years farming/ranching experience with his wife Bonnie and son
Ryan. They operate a 2000 acre cow/calf ranch have utilized an intensive
rotational grazing system for over 20 years and a no-till cropping system
for 6 years. He belongs to the Missouri Slope Irrigation Development
Association and the North Private Grazing Lands Coalition. Ken has
had an exciting year learning about cover crops. |
Richard
Cott, Clay Center, Kansas No-Till Producer
A
Pragmatic View of No-till
Richard Cott along with his brother Robert
operate a diversified irrigated and dryland crop and livestock operation
near Clay Center, KS. Richard is a 1976 graduate of KSU in Animal
Science. He has been no-tilling milo following wheat since then. The
operation has been in a complete no-till system for over a decade. He will
offer practical examples of successes and failures they have experienced.
Richard will be joined by his son Kyle, a 2004 KSU graduate in agronomy
who recently returned from 2 ˝ years in Central Asia serving as an
agronomist. Kyle will present a unique perspective on soils and no-till
practices in this area of the world.
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Sjoerd Duiker
Designing
Better No-Till Systems - A View from the Soil Surface Down
Sjoerd W. Duiker is an Associate Professor of Soil Management and Applied
Soil Physics at Penn State University. His specialization focuses on the
effects of soil management practices on soil physical properties and
processes. This includes the effect of no-tillage and tillage on soil
physical properties, how soil compaction affects soil and crops, what
effect crop rotation plays in maintaining soil quality, and the benefits
and challenges of cover crops. The use of a systems approach to
no-tillage, soil compaction and crop rotations is a crucial element in all
his work. Research takes place on Penn State’s research farms as well as
in collaboration with farmers and field agronomists in Pennsylvania.
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 Dan
Forgey, Gettysburg, South Dakota No-Till Producer
Another Step Forward With No-till
Dan has been with Cronin Farms for almost
40 years and is the cropping foreman for the farm. During their 16
years of no-till, Dan acknowledges that mistakes have been made, but that
Cronin Farms is gaining and learning from them. Dan has the attitude
that as long as you keep learning from your mistakes, no-till will work.
He is a firm believer that you should take care of the land, and it will
take care of you. He attributes much of the farm’s success to the
teachings of Dwayne Beck. To continue their success, Cronin Farms is
now working cattle into their no till system with the use of cover crops.
Rising
To The Challenge - Feature Farmer
Article, Leading Edge 2006
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Lyle Frees, Salina, KS Water Quality Specialist
Rainfall Simulator
Few people are willing to physically stand
in a cropland field during an intense rainstorm to view the water erosion
process at work. The Rainfall Simulator is designed to show what happens
to topsoil on cropland fields and construction sites during rainstorms.
Spectators to this demonstration can view a rainstorm in progress, watch
the power of raindrops and see water erosion as it occurs. The Simulator
demonstrates the benefits of crop residue management in protecting topsoil
during rainstorms. The very portable simulator shows the
results of a 3-inch rainstorm in approximately 15-20 minutes. Four soil
trays placed below the oscillating raindrop nozzle have different levels
of crop residue placed on the soil surface. The “Seeing Is Believing”
demonstration shows the protective benefits of crop residue is in direct
proportion to the level of residue covering the soil surface, the more
residue the less soil loss and more water infiltration. The quantity and
quality of runoff from the soil trays is captured in clear gallon jugs
placed below each tray. A tray of growing grass is used to show the water
quality benefits of grass buffer strips.
Lyle is native Kansan. He was born and raised on a
wheat, milo and cattle farm in central Kansas. After
graduating from Fort Hays State University, he began working for the
Natural Resources Conservation Service (formerly SCS). Lyle has worked at
several locations in central and western Kansas as District
Conservationist of NRCS. Lyle currently is a Resource Conservationist at
the NRCS State Office in Salina. |
Craig
Frenzen, Fullerton, Nebraska No-Till Producer
What I Do and Why
Craig & Jan Frenzen are actively involved
in a diversified no-till operation near Fullerton, NE. They farm 1400
acres plus custom-farm 600 acres. Their crops in rotation include corn,
soybeans, wheat, oats, and alfalfa. Frenzens have a 125-head commercial
cow herd using rotational grazing systems which include double-crop
turnips, oats and rye mixes following wheat or soybeans. They farm a
combination of dryland and irrigated ground, mostly rented. Soil types
range from sand to clay/silt/loams. |
Kirk
Gadzia, Resource Management Services
kgadzia@msn.com
Grazing
in Natures Image - Principles of Integrating Livestock and Crops
Kirk Gadzia owns and
operates Resource Management Services, a training and consulting firm
located in Bernalillo, NM. Kirk has extensive international experience in
consulting with many large ranching and agricultural operations throughout
the United States and overseas.
The focus of his work is a holistic
approach to agriculture and life, whereby land, animals, crops, wildlife
and other resources are planned into the operation and financial picture.
The model for making this work is mimicking natural systems and balancing
life style with long and short term goal.
Kirk also provides customized training and consulting to a wide variety of
public and private business and conservation organizations. Kirk is
co-author of the National Academy of Science 1994 publication entitled
Rangeland Health, and is working to improve rangeland health monitoring
techniques in a wide variety of environments.
Kirk has presented talks at the No-Till on the
Plains Annual Conference in 2003 and 2004, 11th AAPRESID Argentinean
No-till Farmers Association Rosario, Argentina in 2003, and The South
Dakota No-Till Annual Conference in 2007.
Rangeland
Health and Planned Grazing Field Guide by Nathan Sayre and Kirk Gadzia |
Jerry
Hatfield,
National
Soil Tilth Research Laboratory,
Supervisory Plant Physiologist,
Ames, Iowa
Effect of No-till on buffering weather
extremes
Dr. Hatfield’s
research interests focus on the interaction of water, nutrients, carbon,
and light in the response of crops to management systems across varying
landscapes. A portion of his current research efforts is directed toward
the integration of remotely sensed information into agricultural
management decisions to enhance agricultural production efficiency.
He is internationally recognized as one of the leading authorities on the
impact of crop and livestock components of agricultural systems on air,
water, and soil quality. |
Merle
Holle, Marysville, Kansas No-Till Producer
15" Row Wheat -- The Good, The Bad, and the
Ugly
Merle Holle has
been an agricultural crop and livestock producer for 53 years with 14
years no-till, 10 years planting 15” row wheat, and 2 years as a crop loss
insurance adjuster. Additionally, he has served as an associate member of
the Kansas Coalition for Carbon Management (KCCM) since 2002. He has seen
the benefit of better residue management on upland soils, soil and
moisture conservation, increased soil microbial activity, environmental
stewardship improvement, input cost and labor savings. By utilizing
no-till, Merle has better soil structure, less soil erosion, additional
water retention, cleaner runoff (cleaner water in waterways), increased
average yield, lower input costs and labor savings. |
Tom
Humburg, Great Bend, Kansas
Sprayer Technologies Class 101
Thomas Humburg grew up in Rush County on a farm near Bison, Kansas, where he
learned agriculture from his father. Tom taught himself how to weld, and
later welding became one of his trades in life along with being a farmer,
a businessman of a welding shop, and small farm manufacturer of farm
equipment. Being a farmer teaches us to be the best stewards of the land
we have and how to care for it. In the late 1990's Tom met Virgil Simpson
who introduced him to a new way of farming called “no-till” and the
importance of a sprayer. Tom has worked at the Simpson Farm Enterprises
store in Great Bend, which he opened for the Simpson Family out of Ransom,
Kansas, since January 2000. |
Paul
Jasa, University of Nebraska - Lincoln, No-Till Expert
Residue and
Seeding Uniformity Effects on Yield
Paul serves
as an Extension Engineer, University of Nebraska. Paul develops
and conduct educational programs related to no-till equipment and
system management. He has been
working with planting equipment and tillage system evaluation at the
University since 1978. With the experiences gained from research and
Extension activities, he has become a good source of information in the
Midwest on no-till planting equipment and system management. If there is a
mistake to be made with no-till, he has either made it himself or has seen
it done. More importantly, he has learned from those mistakes and
wants to share that information in presentations that stress the systems
approach and the long-term benefits of no-till.

Rogers Memorial No-Till
Research Farm
Tips for No-tilling Corn on Corn |
 Alan
Mindemann, Apache, Oklahoma No-Till Producer
Crop-rotations considerations
Alan
is a Certified Crop Advisor, farm manager, custom farmer, and seed dealer
as well as operating his own farm. A fourth generation farmer, he been
no-tilling for over a decade. The benefits he experiences from no-till
are lower cost of production, higher yields, improved soil structure, and
improved water infiltration.
Against
All Odds - Feature Farmer Article,
Leading Edge 2005 |

Phil Needham, Needham Ag
Technologies
phil@needhamag.com
No-tilling with single disc and
double disc drills (tools and
ideas to maximize their performance, including seeding speeds, seeding
rates, row spacing, seeding depths etc)
Spring nitrogen management
(rates, forms of N, N timing, tiller
management, growth stages for application, methods of application, etc)
Phil Needham is the owner of Needham Ag Technologies, LLC. a family owned
agri-business and agronomic consulting company based near Calhoun, KY.
Needham is a native of Great Britain and holds a diploma in agriculture
and an honors degree in agricultural technology from Cranfield University
in England.
Needham first visited the USA in 1989 and joined Miles Enterprises based
in Owensboro, KY in 1990. Needham was promoted to Opti-Crop (a division
within Miles Enterprises) Manager in 1996, where he managed a team of crop
consultants and projects from Texas to Manitoba and from Virginia to
Washington state.
Needham also has professional agronomy experience with dealers, farmers
and manufacturers in Canada, Mexico, England, France, Germany, Sweden,
China, Romania, Russia, Australia, New Zealand and South America. Needham
considers himself a vehicle of technology, moving and implementing systems
and agronomic technologies around the world to ultimately increase farm
efficiencies, yields and profits. Needham considers himself a vehicle of
technology and brings many crop management practices and systems to
producers across the Central Plains, to help them increase their yields
and profits.
The impact of Needham and his teams work can be seen in his home state of
Kentucky. USDA data show that average wheat yields more than doubled over
a 15-year period from low 30 bushels per acre to the high 60 bushels per
acre, with some farmers seeing wheat yields in excess of 100 bushels per
acre on fields and farms.
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Kris Nichols, Soil
Microbiologist Mandan, ND
Microbial Engineering to Enhance Your
Bottom Line, Part 1
Microbial Engineering to Enhance Your
Bottom Line, Part 2
Her experience includes over 13 years of
research on arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi – a beneficial plant root
symbiont that helps plants obtain nutrients from the soil. She has B.S.
degrees in Plant Biology and in Genetics and Cell Biology from the
University of Minnesota, a M.S. in Environmental Microbiology from West
Virginia University, and a Ph.D. in Soil Science from the University of
Maryland. Since 1996, Nichols has investigated glomalin – a
glycoproteinaceous substance produced by AM fungi. Glomalin contributes to
soil structure and plant health by helping to form and stabilize soil
aggregates. Nichols has found that glomalin is a major component of soil
organic matter (ca. 20%) in undisturbed soils and may be an agriculturally
managed soil carbon sink. Kris is also studying the production of native
prairie grasses for potential biofuel production and soil carbon storage.
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Robert
Ruwoldt,
Australia
Advancing The Art of No-Till Farming In
Australia
Robert Ruwoldt, the immediate past president of
Victorian (Australia) NoTill farmers association,
comes highly recommended by Wayne Smith. According to
Wayne, “Robert Ruwoldt is one of Australia's best, if not THE best, notill
farmer…and a dynamic speaker." Robert is passionate about notill and has
been notilling for 20 years. He uses variable rate technology, autosteer,
shielded spraying between crop rows and uses very little fertilizer for
the amazing yields he achieves (because his soils are so alive after 20
years of notill and stubble retention). Last year, for example, he
achieved 30-35 bushel average cereal yields on 6-7" of total rainfall and
soil moisture - his worst drought on record. Virtually every farmer
around him harvested nothing. Zip. He even averaged 0.78 t/ha lentil
yields. According to Wayne, his soils almost have a perceptible heart
beat! They are that alive after 20 years of notill, stubble retention and
no burning, grazing or cultivation.”
Background Information from Robert Ruwoldt:
Our farm is now a fourth generation family farm and is situated in the
middle of Victoria (Australia) and in the heart of the Wimmera farming
region.
The farm consists of 7000 acres of cropping and strictly no livestock.
We are lucky to have some of the best soils in Australia to farm, they
consist of mainly heavy black clay soil types with good water holding
capacity.
Average rainfall is 16 inches a year of mainly winter rain fall and no
reliable summer rain to count on.
We grow wheat, barley, lentils, canola, beans and chickpeas in our
continuous cropping rotation, this amount of options give us plenty of
diversity in our system.
We started to direct seed our crops back in 1983 and have continued to
advance the system ever since then. The changes continued at a very fast
rate with many new herbicides coming onto the market as well as changing
machinery and farming methods all at once, It was a struggle to keep up.
Every time we would change something in our system we would think that we
had the game sown up, but when I look back now I have to laugh at myself
and my ignorance (lack of knowledge ) at that time of the development of
the No-Till system that we currently use today.
Change is the hardest thing for farmers to do as they have done it that
way for so long and it worked most of the time, they are happy to keep
getting the new tractor or truck but when change involves there farming
practices they do not want to change.
Change will not happen until
the pain of staying the same is greater than the pain of change.
There is always a better way to do things! The challenge is for us to
work through the issues that come along to challenge our current system,
we have to keep on top of these and continue to advance the art of
No-Till farming into the future.
Our current farming system is setup on 30ft seeders and combines, 90ft SP
boom spray and 30ft shrouded sprayer.
All machines have 120inch wheel centres and we run them on a controlled
traffic system every year.
Row spacings are 15inch and 30 inch depending on the crops grown.
We have been using GPS (VRT) and auto steer systems for many years now and
every crop is inter row seeded into last years standing crop residue.
We are continually modifying machinery to do what we want it to do and to
work with our soils and crops we grow. |
Wayne Smith, Australia
Achieving the Impossible
(click for more info)
How good would last year have been if you had
averaged 100 b/ac wheat, and carried 1 cow and calf on every acre of
pasture? That’s impossible you say? What if it isn’t
though?
(click for more info)
Wayne is an independent agronomy consultant with clients throughout
southern Australia, Kenya and South Africa. He publishes a monthly
agronomy newsletter that is subscribed to around the world.
From 1987 to 1992, Wayne worked with the Western Australian Department of
Agriculture
developing
high yield wheat packages for the south coast of Western Australia, an
area that at that time could only achieve wheat yields around 30% of what
was possible. From 1992 until now, Wayne has been
consulting to farmers and farmer groups around the world. He is a
staunch advocate of no-till, is a part-time cattle farmer and aims to run
large corporate size farms as soon as he can. He is passionate about
farming.
Yield
Potentials Are Far Greater Than You Imagine
by Wayne Smith
Plant Language:
Diagnosing Trace Element Deficiencies
by Wayne Smith
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Dr.
Ray Ward, Ward Laboratories, Kearney, NE
Fertilizer - How Do I Know How Much to
Apply?
Dr. Ward is president and co-owner of Ward
Laboratories, Inc. since 1983. He holds numerous memberships
in scientific and honorary academic societies and organizations. His
goals for agriculture and agronomy are to help production agriculture use
its resources as efficiently as possible, to provide information and data
for developing the best use of soil and water resources while maintaining
environmental quality, to be involved in “value-added” agriculture, and to
provide accurate laboratory data for managing production enterprises. Come experience his vast knowledge of soil
quality and agronomic expertise in an easy-to-understand presentation. He
will answer all of your questions on continuous no-till.

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Mark
Watson, Alliance, NE
Water
and Soil
Mark farms 3,500 acres
with his brother Bruce 10 miles north of Alliance, Nebraska. His farm has
been in the family for approximately 115 years so Mark considers himself
definitely born and bred to farm. They have been completely continuous
no-till since 1994. Their farm is dryland and irrigated, raising wheat,
corn, pinto beans, garbanzo beans, proso millet. Mark is married to
Denise and has a son Jacob and daughter Hannah. Bruce and Mark have been
selected as Master Conservationists for the state of Nebraska and will be
receiving the award in September 2007. Mark Watson also serves as the
no-till education coordinator for Western Nebraska.
Mark
will deliver an excellent presentation on the how’s and why’s of
continuous no-till featuring real-world economics from his own operation.

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Kevin
Wiltse, Timken, Kansas No-Till Producer
Building a Solid No-till System
Kevin has farmed in
southeast Rush county Kansas since graduating from Kansas State University
in Agronomy in 1995. His dryland farm has an average annual precipitation
of 22”-24” inches on Harney silt loam. Major crops include wheat, milo,
and soybeans. Kevin converted to 100% no-tillage in 1997. No-till was
chosen in order to be more profitable and efficient while improving soil
qualities. Kevin has experienced decreased soil erosion, has eliminated
summer fallow, and gained more family time in the process. He has been
featured in Kansas Farmer, Leading Edge, and The Furrow
magazines in the past and is gaining recognition as a popular no-till
speaker.
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Visit www.salinakansas.org
for assistance in planning your visit to Salina, Kansas. You
can also request a free visitor information packet.
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