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The Rural Voice, 1989-07, Page 38;BOPPING CROPPING CROPPING ellow streaks in growing crops and plugged tillage equipment have become an unlikely couple which has gathered a good deal of attention from farmers and researchers. The cause for their concern is crop residues. There is no doubt that concentrated trails of trash, especially chaff, hurt crop yields, particularly in reduced - tillage fields. That same trash plugs tillage equipment and planters. A combine's uneven straw and chaff distribution creates a multitude of headaches ranging from poor weed control, compacted soils, and poor stands to nutrient tie-up and poor performance by planters and drills. And while no -tillers and double - croppers probably face the biggest problem with the straw and chaff, even farmers in a corn/soys/wheat rotation could benefit from evenly spreading residue. If you could blanket the soil surface more evenly with residue in a min -till or no -till situation, you could do a better job of controlling erosion. Crop residues act like raindrop shock absorbers. If spread entirely over the soil surface rather than left in windrows, the residue could absorb impact from raindrops. Otherwise, when drops hit the soil surface the rain loosens soil and starts the soil moving. But only after you've tried pulling a drill or planter through a thick mat of poorly distributed straw and chaff can you begin to appreciate the shortfalls in your combine or your custom operator's combine. Residue problems worsen as grain and soybean yields go up and as header width widens. Most combines off the dealer's lot have only medium to poor ability to spread straw and chaff. With a 20 or 24 -foot header, most combines will spread the straw half that distance at best. Those concentrated residues will plug tillage implements or no -till and reduced -till drills and planters. It's SCATTER YOUR TRASH TROUBLES Mervyn Erb is an independent crop consultant and agronomist. also difficult to get drills or planters to penetrate the residue so they can place seed accurately. In addition, soils under the thick mat are cooler and wetter, again leading to poor germi- nation or soil compaction. It's also more difficult to control weeds in heavy residues. The heavy residues may shield emerged weeds from contact herbicides or prevent pre -emergence herbicides from getting to the soil surface. No combine equipped with standard straw spreaders does very well spreading straw, though conven- tional combines are probably better than rotary models. One solution is to add chaff spreaders or combination chaff -straw spreaders to your combine. Choppers will reduce straw into pieces small enough so they don't hang up on equipment. However, if it is damp, even chopped straw will bunch up. Even with a straw chopper, it's important to distribute the residue evenly the full width of the header. Adding more sheet metal and in- creasing the length and size of the vanes on the chopper will usually direct enough straw to the sides to get a good spread. But I've noticed cases in which no -till drills performed worse when soybean residue had gone through a straw chopper. Without the chopper, disc openers were better able to penetrate the long, brittle stalks. When they had been chopped, pieces were too short for openers and often hairpinned. Possibly the best advice I could give you is to use a straw chopper in conjunction with a straw and chaff spreader. Your ultimate goal is to spread your residue the width of your combine head. The better the residue is spread, the easier your job will be, whether it's preparing bean ground for fall wheat, no -tilling fall wheat and spring grains, or even plowing or chisel -plowing corn ground.0 36 THE RURAL VOICE