Destruction of mature cover crop stock before sowing or after direct sowing. May be by mechanical methods (windrowers, shredding rollers, short discs) or chemical methods.
Knowledge base
Mixtures of crops sown between the main crops, but often also providing continuous crop cover in the row spacing. Due to their wide diversity, they provide a wide range of benefits in terms of soil life and nutrient cycling. When used correctly, they perform a wide range of functions in addition to building soil life: soil loosening, weed suppression, nutrient digestion, nutrient storage, nitrogen fixation.
Zero-till is the lowest degree of soil disturbance compared to direct seeding. The disc of the single-disc seeding unit used cuts the soil surface at an angle, lifts the soil slightly and then drops it back onto the inserted seed. After sowing, the sown row is almost imperceptible.
There is no form of tillage prior to sowing in the production area. When sowing, the disc or cultivator sowing unit opens the soil surface only to the extent necessary to form the seed furrows and then recompacts the seed trench. The required nutrients are applied to the seed in a single operation, either in liquid and/or solid form, next to or under the seed. Subsequent addition of nutrients can be done by injection or foliar application.
Only the strip of seed rows is cultivated, usually 20-25 cm wide. The furrows are left untilled, typically with mulch.
If necessary, cultivation of up to the top 10 cm for mechanical weeding or seedbed preparation. The tool may be either a drag or disc cultivator.
Cultivation without ploughing, where all tools other than the plough are allowed. Loosener, grubber, combiner, short disc, ploughshares. Common feature is that they work only vertically, loosening, no rotation, possibly minimal mixing. Here too, the aim is to minimise soil disturbance. The appropriate cultivation depth should be determined by mechanically testing the soil layers, even before each cultivation. The test can be carried out with a spade, a trowel or [...]
Usually 'conventional' ploughing, where the topsoil is turned down to a depth of 15-45 cm. The top aerated (aerobic) soil layer is deposited at the bottom and the bottom anaerobic layer is deposited at the top, or mixed together, thus damaging and destroying the established soil life. The agitated layer loosens, but this is only temporary or often excessive. Meanwhile, below the cultivation depth, a thick, compacted layer, called the ectal [...]
On 27.08.2024 we participated at the 62nd AGRA International Fair for Agriculture and Food in Slovenia! It was almost as big as the Novi Sad Fair, and...
GY.I.K.
Yes, it is. Even in areas with low rainfall of 250 mm per year, cover crops are successfully grown all over the world. Using various techniques and methods, germination and growth of cover crops can be ensured in such conditions.
Yes, regenerative farming can be applied to all soil types. The methods and practices can be adapted to different soil conditions and are therefore effective in all cases.
Regenerative farming can be used on any scale, from flower pots to thousands of hectares of farmland. The methods and techniques can be adapted regardless of size.