Arable Farming Flashcards
What is an arable crop?
A Cultivated plant that is grown commercially on a large scale
What are the general rules for planting crops?
Use crops that suit the soil and the climate best, and take it year by year, as soil and climate change.
Do not assume what grows well on your neighbors’ farm will work well on yours.
Lastly, Make sure your timing of fungicide applications is on point.
Where is the best land for arable in Scotland?
Most commonly the North East of Scotland, and in the Scottish borders.
What are the suitable soil classifications for Cereal growth and what affects this?
Between 1 and 3(2).
Affected by Climate, gradient, soil (including stone content), wetness and erosion.
However, local conditions such as shading, access and field size can have an impact too.
Name the most common cereal crops used in order of importance?
- Spring barley
- Winter barley
- Winter oats
- Winter wheat
- biodigesters Rye and Triticale
What other crops can be used that are not cereal in order of importance?
- Winter oilseed rape
- Potatoes
- Spring beans
State the important dates for Winter crops, Spring crops and Potatoes?
Winter- Sown in August-October and Harvested the following July-October (1 year in the ground basically).
Spring- Sown in March-April and harvested in August-September. (6 months in the ground, quicker cash flow).
Potatoes- Sown in March-April and harvested from July-November depending on use.
What is the general ground prep needed before planting cereal?
Usually starts with a stubble or grass field, which is then ploughed.
Then usually a one-pass combine drill used to work the ground, sow the seed and fertilise at the same time. However sometimes a cultivator may be used before this but depends.
The ground is then rolled.
What soil types and conditions must you try and avoid?
You don’t want to be ploughing or seeding in clay-rich, very wet soil. Usually, the organic matter content is low, and they require more work and fuel from the machinery. If exposed to heat, clay soils can become very hard and dry which again is time consuming to reverse.
What reasons other than soil, are important issues that need to be addressed?
Cost of machinery very expensive, and farmers often limited to what they can afford. Contractors sometimes used.
Timing is also an issue, crop has to be sown before bad weather comes to allow the seed to develop a good base.
Labour availability- linked to timing, because often when your crops are ready to be harvested, every other farm is ready too. This puts men and machinery in high demand.
Once the crop is established what happens next?
Praying takes place; Herbicides kill weeds before harvest. Usually 1 application. Fungicides also sprayed to prevent disease spread. Perhaps 4 applications.
Fertiliser top dressing; normally only for Nitrogen fertilizing, usually just 1-2 applications. Used for spring barley.
Explain how crops can be dried, such as oilseed rape? What issues can arise from this?
Leaving it to dry out in a wrap (swathing), or spraying it with acid to dry it (dessicating). Dessicating kills leaves, and dries crop before harvest.
And then combine the crop. If strong winds after this between you desiccating and combining, all the seeds could fall off. So be careful with the weather.
What are the issues of using contractors?
Contractors usually rush jobs because it is cheaper for them, but quality usually drops as a result. If the job is small, they may delay and delay it, taking on bigger jobs which could cost you your harvest.
What is the issue of cooperating machinery with neighbors?
Sharing machinery is cheaper, but often you do not get the machine when you want it or need it most. The machine is “always on the wrong farm” and this working together approach can often take a selfish turn especially on marginal years. Things may not get done on time, which can be costly.
Name and explain the use of different fertilizers?
Nitrogen- speeds up growth of all parts of plant
Phosphorus-encouragement of rooting systems
potassium-general plant health
calcium (lime)- changes pH which influences nutrient availability
Magnesium, Sulphur and trace elements- less critical but benefit the soil quality in general.