Mechanical cultivation for weeds

   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #1  

JoeBiscuit

New member
Joined
Mar 24, 2011
Messages
16
Tractor
JD 4400
Not wanting to spray 10 acres of row crops for weeds every year, is getting a dedicated cultivator like a Farmall Cub, or Model A, or 140 or Super C still a realistic method of weed control? Or is using a high wheeled tractor and cultivators a technology that is past it's time?

Thanks for the input.
 
   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #2  
Not wanting to spray 10 acres of row crops for weeds every year, is getting a dedicated cultivator like a Farmall Cub, or Model A, or 140 or Super C still a realistic method of weed control? Or is using a high wheeled tractor and cultivators a technology that is past it's time?

Thanks for the input.

Years ago no one sprayed crops, all cultivated with a tractor around here.
Now it's all sprayed. What it boils down too is if you don't mind some weeds, then cultivate, if you what very little to no weeds spray. If you like driving a tractor, then cultivate. Any of the small older tractors make good cultivators.
 
   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #3  
According to the USDA, 70+% of the 2011 corn and cotton acreage and 94% of the 2011 soybean acreage was planted with herbicide-tolerant (HT) varieties, all up from minuscule amounts in 1996 (ERS/USDA Data - Adoption of Genetically Engineered Crops in the U.S.). So, cultivation is still taking place on some acreage, but that acreage is dwindling. I suspect that some acreage will continue to be cultivated by organic row-crop producers.

The last time I checked, prototype enterprise budgets didn't show much of a return advantage for HT crops over non-HT crops. However, I suspect the HT crops have an advantage in scheduling field operations.

My guess is that that use of HT varieties would be more cost effective if you already have the spraying equipment but would have to acquire a tractor and equipment for cultivation for 10 acres. However, you would have to pencil out your costs to make the decision.

In my area, the only row crop still cultivated is tobacco, and I don't remember seeing wide-row soybeans over the last 10 years or so.

Steve
 
   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #4  
all organic vegetable farms use some sort of cultivating tractor(s) there are a lot of different methods that can be used and it all depends on crops, soil types, ect. to find the best one(s). for example the farm I work for grows almost every vegetable there is and we have two kubota cultivating tractors, one is set up with basket weeders the other has sweeps. the key to cultivating is to get the weeds when they are small! also the hotter the day the better.
 
   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #5  
all organic vegetable farms use some sort of cultivating tractor(s) there are a lot of different methods that can be used and it all depends on crops, soil types, ect. to find the best one(s). for example the farm I work for grows almost every vegetable there is and we have two kubota cultivating tractors, one is set up with basket weeders the other has sweeps. the key to cultivating is to get the weeds when they are small! also the hotter the day the better.

Any chance you could post a few pictures of those set ups? I'm very interested in how a farm that is actually doing this and making it work sets up its equipment. I'd like to try it for myself, and seeing how it's done would save me from a lot of wasted "try and fail" time.
 
   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #6  
all organic vegetable farms use some sort of cultivating tractor(s) there are a lot of different methods that can be used and it all depends on crops, soil types, ect. to find the best one(s). for example the farm I work for grows almost every vegetable there is and we have two kubota cultivating tractors, one is set up with basket weeders the other has sweeps. the key to cultivating is to get the weeds when they are small! also the hotter the day the better.

Yes we do. There is a divide, of sorts, in agriculture and the non-gmo segment is growing very fast in the grain sectors. Non roundup ready grains, beans, and vegetables will almost always command a higher price.

Non-gmo fed chickens, hogs and beef also constitute a very healthy market share, at attractive prices. There really is two different markets now and the grower can evaluate and choose which he wishes to enter.

Differing equipment being required, to some extent, this will be interesting to watch as we go forward.
 
   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #7  
personally, my favorite cultivating tractors are the high wheeled kubota's we have two of them with mid mounted toolbars. one always has the basket weeder and the other has sweeps that we can constantly adjust if need be. here is the website and there are some pics of the machines. greenviewfarmri.com
 

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   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #8  
I like the offset - similar to a Farmall Cub?
Thanks for the link!
 
   / Mechanical cultivation for weeds #9  
Here are some pictures of the result of manual cultivation.

The first one is of my 83 year old grandfather on his Farmall 140 cultivating sweet corn.

I have also included some pictures of the pumpkins that we are currently growing.

There is a before and after picture of a pumpkin plant and morning glories. I manually cultivated with a hoe. Then plowed with my Farmall 140.

They key to cultivation is to do it often and when the weeds are small. Then to cultivate just before the crop gets too big. I cultivated these pumpkins when they were just starting to run and the vines covered the ground before the weeds could germinate again.

I do plant Round-up ready field corn. The season is too long and the weeds have too much of an opportunity to come up in cultivated corn that is left to dry in the field. JMO
 

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