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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Fertilizing Winter wheat
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<blockquote data-quote="504RP" data-source="post: 1651610" data-attributes="member: 40335"><p>I am in North West Arkansas along the Arkansas river valley. Done a little research last night on the net. Was reading an article about split nitrategon applications like you described. They was talking something about how doing that the plants get a slower, longer lasting feed. I am going to read it over again. For me it was a complicated read, at the same time very informative. They were using bushels of corn increase in production by slow feeding rather than putting one big application of nitrigen all at once. </p><p></p><p>I can get either Ammonium nitrate or urea here. They were talking something about a way to hold the nitrogen in the soil near the roots of the plant that would avoid letting the nitrogen be asorbed into the soil deeper than the soil level.</p><p></p><p>Also said something that because of the growing demand on farmers to produce more bushels of corn or wheat (basically all crops) per acre. By the year 2050 the amount of nitrogen a farmer will be allowed to put on their crops will be dictated by the government.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="504RP, post: 1651610, member: 40335"] I am in North West Arkansas along the Arkansas river valley. Done a little research last night on the net. Was reading an article about split nitrategon applications like you described. They was talking something about how doing that the plants get a slower, longer lasting feed. I am going to read it over again. For me it was a complicated read, at the same time very informative. They were using bushels of corn increase in production by slow feeding rather than putting one big application of nitrigen all at once. I can get either Ammonium nitrate or urea here. They were talking something about a way to hold the nitrogen in the soil near the roots of the plant that would avoid letting the nitrogen be asorbed into the soil deeper than the soil level. Also said something that because of the growing demand on farmers to produce more bushels of corn or wheat (basically all crops) per acre. By the year 2050 the amount of nitrogen a farmer will be allowed to put on their crops will be dictated by the government. [/QUOTE]
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