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The Great Deep Tillage Experiment 

aTrippyFarmer
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#Farm #Illinois #Fall #Harvest #FarmingSimulator22
Andy "aTrippyFarmer" Dole is a 6th generation farmer from Central Illinois. On this farm, Andy works alongside his father, Marty, his uncles, Chris and Jeff, and his sister, Katie, to grow corn and soybeans on some of the finest dirt in the world. Andy and his family are deeply rooted in the area, operating a large farm that traces it origins back into the 1800s. Although some tracts did not stand the test of time, Andy and his family still grow corn and soybeans on fields that have been in the family for longer than even the oldest members of the farm have been alive. We do, we have, and we always will take tremendous pride in calling this piece of paradise our home. Andy was a Bronze Tablet graduate of the University of Illinois in the field of Crop Sciences, following the same path as his father and late grandfather.
It would be misleading for Andy to claim that this life is one that came by chance; rather, as a member of two multi-generational farm families, it was simply in his blood. His passion for agriculture traces back to his early youth--some of his fondest, earliest memories being of days spent riding in the combine with his father and grandfather. Although his understanding of the lifestyle was much less complex in the beginning, the love he has for farming, and its industry has only appreciated through time. As this dream blossomed into adulthood, Andy now works relentlessly, and tirelessly, to chase his own dreams and to build a farming operation of his own alongside his family.
We, as a whole operation, are handymen, electricians, mechanics, landscapers, accountants, economists, caretakers, stewards, and, most importantly, farmers, and we take an incredible amount of pride in our work. There is no challenge too overwhelming, no situation too stressful, and no problem too difficult for us to take on, and we want to take you along with us. Welcome to our farm and welcome to our lives. You have the best seat in the house to watch the everyday chaos of farming unfold--we usually only get concerned when things aren't going wrong!
Follow Andy on Social Media for Live Updates:
Twitter: / atrippyfarmer
Facebook: / atrippyfarmer
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15 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 75   
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
Go to drinkag1.com/atrippyfarmer to get started on your first purchase and receive a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 and 5 travel packs. Thanks to AG1 for sponsoring today’s video!
@NukeLife87
@NukeLife87 6 месяцев назад
I have tried AG1 and do not like the taste. Could just be my taste buds.
@tompunch
@tompunch 6 месяцев назад
Great video Andy!
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
Appreciate it!
@dmiller9786
@dmiller9786 6 месяцев назад
I fully support Marty and his recreational tillage.
@LtColDaddy71
@LtColDaddy71 6 месяцев назад
I’ve been to a few seminars put on by a guy named Gabe Brown, and the term “recreational tillage” is used to describe the actions of a lot of farmers.
@dmiller9786
@dmiller9786 6 месяцев назад
Perhaps many are farming with twenty-something sons and need a bit of 'me' time?
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
He usually doesn't run much tillage himself unless we are short-staffed!
@LtColDaddy71
@LtColDaddy71 6 месяцев назад
@@dmiller9786 I have some amazing girl farmer daughters who would not appreciate your comment. Not offended though, but the fastest growth in our industry is females managing farms and ranches.
@davidmicalizio824
@davidmicalizio824 6 месяцев назад
Great info!
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
Thanks!!
@deronlogterman2951
@deronlogterman2951 6 месяцев назад
Try using the depth probe to find the compaction layer 1st, then run the inline ripper about 1 to 2 inches below that. Just a thought. I like to do test strips as wide as the planter..
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
We don't have a compaction probe. It would probably be nice to have one. When I am probing tiles, I don't feel like I ever sense a compaction layer, but I might not have the right mindset when probing.
@aaronjarvenpa1743
@aaronjarvenpa1743 5 месяцев назад
Yes it does help
@BruceBergman
@BruceBergman 6 месяцев назад
The occasional deep ripping makes sense and might pay off in the yields. Keep records on where and how deep, and track of it for next year. and itll pull up those prehistoric Boulders for picking. 15:30
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
Most of the boulders have been claimed... I think. I mapped these passes in the GPS. If it's effective enough to justify the pass, you probably wouldn't even need it mapped to see the target area.
@christopherkositany8127
@christopherkositany8127 6 месяцев назад
I need this job of driving please
@georgegozelski7330
@georgegozelski7330 6 месяцев назад
What in the hell are you doing trying to pulls that thing at 7 mph? You are going way too fast! Slow down to 5 mph and the bouncing will stop and you'll keep the ripper in the ground and do an overall better job!
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
Agree to disagree. If you're not pushing a tractor to the high end of it's power curve at all times, you are wasting money through unnecessary depreciation. The ripper probably could do a better job at a slower speed, but you're splitting hairs.
@markdobson4562
@markdobson4562 5 месяцев назад
I would disagree. The fracture is better with speed. Many run 5mph because 7mph apparently is scary, the have the horsepower to do more as well very often.
@ncpanther
@ncpanther 6 месяцев назад
One thing worth trying is ripping tree lines/roots and headlands and grain cart approaches. If you could share your ab lines with the co op and apply nh3 right where you inlined ripped. Basically putting your gas in a compaction free zone where you roots get deeper following shank especially if you plant right over it. Not sure if it matches your soil but usually ripping 15 inches or more alows a line ripper to full shatter shank to shank on 30 in spaced. Grab your backhoe and shovel and dig a couple soil pits. Roots will show what your tillage does. On farm research is always the best!
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
I would be afraid that my nitrogen would be more prone to leaching if it was in the tillage cavity. That is where most of the excess water would permeate, theoretically.
@ncpanther
@ncpanther 6 месяцев назад
@@aTrippyFarmer yall do all your nh3 in the fall or some in the spring also?
@kowenkopp5648
@kowenkopp5648 6 месяцев назад
You need to get rid of them wide points and use the narrow ones
@allenwalters9068
@allenwalters9068 6 месяцев назад
Still waiting for that inch plus rain!! Some guys been doing a little working today, oir retailer was taking nh3 tanks between Charleston and westfield yesterday and maybe today, guy had 350 acres he wanted to do, someone else called said thry could do it but might not have enough when they ran out they are out of nh3!!
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
It's been another great fall for the retailers and the tile guys. New pickup trucks for all next spring! In all seriousness, it needs to start raining here soon. We need subsoil moisture almost every summer.
@hfff1
@hfff1 6 месяцев назад
Oh no, a cliff hanger!
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
Tune back in 12 months to see the results! 🤣
@bladewiper
@bladewiper 6 месяцев назад
A wash pad with a settling tank, would be a great idea.
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
Great minds think alike!
@BruceBergman
@BruceBergman 6 месяцев назад
You need to run the combine every few weeks to keep the batteries charged and engine lubricant distributed. 😊
@MatthiasSchulenburg
@MatthiasSchulenburg 6 месяцев назад
No “thanks for tuning in. I greatly appreciate your support for the channel. Please like, subscribe, comment, you know I love to talk about farming. peace” ….. wow, that felt weird 😮
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
It was either that or a 50 minute video!
@luisnunes7933
@luisnunes7933 6 месяцев назад
Hello! High speed ripping demands an insane amount of power per shank! So, fuel consumption is increased almost exponentially! Besides, tractor integrity will be at risk! The tougher the job, the slower the better (3 to 5 mph)...
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
It was about to rain... time was limited!
@luisnunes7933
@luisnunes7933 6 месяцев назад
@@aTrippyFarmer 👌
@nfi806ihc
@nfi806ihc 6 месяцев назад
Did you check to see how deep your compaction layer is?
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
It's deep enough that I couldn't see it!
@jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754
@jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754 5 месяцев назад
Do you have a compaction problem? Digging a hole with a shovel will give you a great visualization of what's happening in your soil Compaction is one of my biggest challenges in reducing tillage on our soil. A ripper like that is a great transition tool until the soil is healthy enough to not get compacted That looks like a great tool to make a ripper stripper out of! Get a fertilizer cart behind that thing and that is your fault tillage or spring tillage some of your fertilizer application.
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 5 месяцев назад
There are some guys that run a strip tillage bars that put on dry fertilizer at the same time. Most farmers would avoid banding any form of fertilizer this deep, though. It takes too long for a seedling to get 12-20" into the ground!
@jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754
@jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754 5 месяцев назад
@aTrippyFarmer oh yeah, no, you wouldn't put your fertilizer that deep. The guys down south have some pretty hard clay, they will strip till at 16 or 18 inches, and the fertilizer will come out around that 6, 7 in
@jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754
@jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754 5 месяцев назад
@aTrippyFarmer using the shovel tells you a lot, how your soil breaks apart, what it looks like tells you what your structure is like. How susceptible to compaction, how well water can move... Worm count, good healthy soil you should have a half a dozen in each cubic foot. How hard did the shovel go down. Atmosphere can't penetrate 200psi soil, soil life is anaerobic, it needs air.
@BruceBergman
@BruceBergman 6 месяцев назад
Logic says not to put in AmmoniaNH3 until closer to planting. 4:08
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
On paper, you are correct. Logistics and pricing also play a role in the equation. I don't like any type of shank in the spring, especially with NH3, excluding sidedress.
@donaldberg7955
@donaldberg7955 6 месяцев назад
A farm I worked on always “ripped” every field in the fall because of the reasons you shared....removed compaction etc etc...THEN, they went to ‘Minimum” tillage, sold all the ripping equipment and saw NO decrease in yields....confused!!! What is the correct practice
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
I have seen some similar things on a few farms. I think there is enough evidence to constantly try the alternatives, but I am not completely sold on conventional tillage being worthless.
@allenwalters9068
@allenwalters9068 6 месяцев назад
2017 got to wet gassed some first few days of December, then was done december 22nd was back gassing dry and dusty, ran till the 24th finished last tank that morning was odd having retailor say the 23rd wjere do you want tanks were not working the 24th, put tje first tank on thst day 67 degrees 2 tanks later it was 30 and wind blowing
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
I do believe fall NH3 price contracts expire here on December 31st. Most of the time, you lose quite a price advantage if they lapse, but not always. This video was filmed a while ago. It was very early when we started the bars. I believe still October. At the time, we thought it was going to rain and get wet. The forecast have been so wrong for so long at this point... it's almost comical!
@ddom678
@ddom678 6 месяцев назад
why not dig a selected number of holes in the field to see the actual effects of soil compaction to determine whether the deep tillage implement would be beneficial to the field rather than waiting till the next year to measure benefit by crop yield? The deep tillage implement will not be the only contributor to crop yield. It seems to me that it will be difficult to isolate the benefit of said implement when considering crop yield.
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
The only thing that matters is revenue and expense. If the pass creates a positive yield response based on harvest data versus its cost, it is worth doing. You can dig all of the holes you want, but that combine data is worth infinitely times more for decision making. It would be interesting to see a side view of the soil profile!
@mungogerryjnr
@mungogerryjnr 6 месяцев назад
Right idea Wrong machine! Deep ripper isn’t a Sub soiler ! One day Andy One day
@SouthernFarmingTV
@SouthernFarmingTV 6 месяцев назад
My pro tip was I always ran my wings backwards from lift or a remote far away. Sometime u f around and find out.
@agger838
@agger838 6 месяцев назад
Same way for the grain cart auger fold
@SouthernFarmingTV
@SouthernFarmingTV 6 месяцев назад
@@agger838 I damn sure started to say that too but held back . Hell I'd be smoking some of that devils lettuce in one hand answering a phone with the other and a mind full of good ole Columbian marching powder while jamming to uncle Ted nugent and press the WRONG F ING BUTTON. just once . Then work on it the rest of the day . Got down
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
I do that on the grain cart like the other comment said. You don't want the slide and the fold to be too close together... 🤣
@LtColDaddy71
@LtColDaddy71 6 месяцев назад
That’s not recreational tillage. Actually, that’s one hell of a tool. It seems like it does a lot with minimal disturbance. When we take on new ground, we run a huge single shank rig affectionally called the earth Quaker, that takes 2 D-11’s to get through the field. Maybe do some tile work, despite tile being more of a symptom, not the disease itself. It has its place. I’d love to see you put out a heavy cereal rye cover crop now. Combined with the lifting that tool did, the results would be amazing, and you get a nice crop insurance premium reduction that covers the cost of the seed.
@agger838
@agger838 6 месяцев назад
Why not do your own anhydrous instead of doing recreational tillage
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
That's no fun!
@scottjanes9074
@scottjanes9074 6 месяцев назад
Appreciate the sarcasm Andy, but if you'd like to trade places with a union member who is on their feet for a 12hr shift assembling the tractor or combine you SIT in and don't even have to steer, I'm sure you'd welcome the break.😉
@flyingeagle8231
@flyingeagle8231 6 месяцев назад
Maybe you could fork over the cash to pay for it. I'm sure he would welcome that.
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
I enjoy the occasional Union joke. It is all in good fun! I do think many self-employed individuals would happily take your pay, benefits, insurance, etc.. in a heartbeat if their home was close enough to a factory. The biggest winner between all of us is Mother Deere, not you or I.
@markdobson4562
@markdobson4562 5 месяцев назад
Been on both sides of that argument. Definitely a much different life on the farm than in a union job. You are paid for each hour. A lot of thankless ones in ag. Definitely mother deere is the winner.
@iahawks9434
@iahawks9434 6 месяцев назад
You don’t need to pull shit so fast. Jesus Christ drop a gear and let the tractor not work so hard
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
If you're not pulling something as fast as effectively possible, you are quite literally wasting money. They don't trade per acre worked... it is per engine hour.
@muskyman26
@muskyman26 6 месяцев назад
I’m just here to read what the pros have to say
@flyingeagle8231
@flyingeagle8231 6 месяцев назад
I would bet the closest most of those pros came to farming was to play farming simulator on their computer.
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
I only post videos to gather intel from the commenters. I'm actually from China!
@muskyman26
@muskyman26 6 месяцев назад
@@aTrippyFarmer sneaky Gina man
@elijahrobinson2362
@elijahrobinson2362 25 дней назад
What the heck ran into your beak? That looks like it was not too enjoyable.
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 23 дня назад
I had a small chunk of skin cancer removed. It doesn't look great!
@elijahrobinson2362
@elijahrobinson2362 16 дней назад
@@aTrippyFarmerlooks good enough, especially knowing the cancer was removed!
@CaryGuyer
@CaryGuyer 3 месяца назад
CHERRY...... Killing a 620hp tractor just is attributed to operator skill/or LACK of.
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 3 месяца назад
I'm lucky to get my shoes tied correctly most days!
@lancevanvleet5013
@lancevanvleet5013 6 месяцев назад
You guys need some livestock
@aTrippyFarmer
@aTrippyFarmer 6 месяцев назад
My dad and uncles want nothing to do with livestock after growing up with a large herd. Row crop farming is too easy and profitable to justify adding cattle back.
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