SlideShare a Scribd company logo
2013 ACORN Conference
Delta Beauséjour, Moncton NB

Workshop Title: Mechanical Weeding Techniques
Speakers & their titles:Josh Oulton (Tap Root Farms, NS), Michael Carr
(Jemseg River Farm, NB), Kent Coates (Nature's Route Farm, NB)
Executive Summary
This presentation featured guest speakers from three different farms. Each
guest speaker presented for 15 minutes on the methods they use on their farms
to mechanically cultivate, as well as other methods of weed control and
prevention that they use. There was a brief discussion at the end about where
each farmer gave his input about when to start using mechanical cultivation, and
what it has done for them in terms of efficiency.
Detailed Notes
Michael Carr, Jemseg River Farm
Jemseg River Farm is in its 4th production year, with 8 acres under cultivation.
Their main crops are veggies, potatoes, and strawberries.
Almost everything on the farm is planted in two rows(except for strawberries and
brussel sprouts)
Approach to Weed Control: Initially Michael thought about adopting the Eliot
Coleman style of production, and to start using a BCS walk-behind tractor. He
decided in the end that it was impractical because of their larger scale and the
number of rocks in soil. He made the decision to use tractors because he grew
up with them and is comfortable working with them.
Tractors:
11 horsepower Farmall '79 is main cultivation tool:
• Uses a midpoint cultivator, which is easier to cultivate with rather than with a 3point hitch. An implement that is set up onto a 3-point hitch will swing in
the opposite direction as you are turning which could run over your crops
during cultivation
• Cultivator, plow, mower, manure spreader cost $3500 altogether.
• Motor is offset to one side so you can see what is directly below you as you're
on the tractor
• Cultivates a two-row bed in two passes
Also owns a 23 horsepower Farmall, but it's not working at the moment.
Also owns a 28 horsepower Kubota
• Diesel powered, and has a three point hitch
• More power
2013 ACORN Conference
Delta Beauséjour, Moncton NB

Michael uses the tractor to mark rows before planting. Everything needs to be
straight to cultivate with a tractor.
It takes approximately one hour to cultivate ~3/4 acre, and costs ~$4 each time in
fuel. Mechanical cultivation is by far worth investing in for them because of the
amount of labor it saves. They hardly use any of their time hand weeding.
Other forms of weed control: Diamond hoes from Lee Valley; and cover cropping.
Youtube: Farmers and their weed control machines (refer to slide show)

Josh Oulton, Tap Root Farms
Methods of weed control: First and foremost, Tap Root Farms spends a lot of
time hand weeding. They use straw mulch and black plastic mulches on the high
tunnel tomatoes and peppers to eliminate weeds in the beds. They also plant a
mixture of rye and clover in some of their alleys, and whipper snip midway
through the season. For smaller crops, such as spinach, they will use the wheel
hoe.
In addition to mulching the high tunnel tomatoes and peppers, they use biotello in
for a lot of their field crops. Biotello is probably their main weed control tool.
Mechanical cultivation techniques: In the cases where they do use mechanical
cultivation, Josh will set up the tractor with the cultivator on the front and the
Reigion the back. They will often use the Reigifor cole crops, or anything else
that's planted at a 32” spacing. Most of their cole crops are cultivated at least 3
times.
Preparing beds: To standardize the spacing between the rows and to make
them as straight as possible for cultivation, he will mark rows behind the tractor
with a pair of chains while he is defining the bed. Next he will follow over the rows
with the Jang seeder.
Flame weeding: They use flame weeding as a cultivation tool, but they have
decided to rethink how they do it. Sometimes they use an Earthway seeder,
which easily gets clogged up with residues on the soil surface while seeding.
Instead of flaming the weeds on the bed right before seeding, their plan for next
year is to allow the weeds on the bed to germinate, and then to seed directly into
the bed. Then after a few days he will flame weed and kill the weeds without
harming the germinating seeds.
2013 ACORN Conference
Delta Beauséjour, Moncton NB

Kent Coates, Nature's Route Farm
Nature's RouteFarm uses cover crops, rotations, handweeding and hoe weeding
as control strategies in addition to mechanical cultivation.
Cover cropping: Cover crops are a very important aspect of Nature's
RouteFarm’s weed control strategy. Generally they will use a buckwheat-fall rye
rotation, where the buckwheat will be followed by fall planted rye, and veggies
will be planted the following year. They also plant fall rye in the wheel tracks
(alleys) of the carrot beds. 2012 was too dry to put in cover crops, and as a
result 2013 involved a lot of hoeing and handweeding, which stresses the
importance of cover crops in reducing the weed population in the seed bed.
Cover crops are also important for breaking down sod and preparing the soil for
planting.
Seed bed preparation: Kent will make his beds with a bed shaper, and will stale
seed bed for 7days. Afterwards he will go in with a small hiller in front of the
tractor, and will plant behind into the furrows with a seeder (refer to video in
Kent's slides). They use three mounted Planet Juniors for seeding, and
standardize their beds so that everything is seeded 3 rows per bed, into 3
trenches. Rows must be parallel and straight in order to cultivate mechanically.
A note about tractor cultivation: Kent mounts his S-tine cultivator onto the front of
tractor to avoid taking out plants while steering. (For instance, if the cultivator is
on the back, turn right and tool turns left). This is the same problem Michael Carr
addresses by using a midpoint cultivator. On a three-point hitch there is more
control if the tool is in the front of the tractor or under the wheels.
Kent sums up his most important factors for weed control in the last slide
1.Cover crops
2.Seed bed prep
3.Parallel (straight) rows
4.Control of cultivation
5.Timing
Finally, he estimates that mechanical cultivation has saved 20-30 hrs per week of
hand weeding. All of the farmers on the panel agree that if your farm owns a
tractor, it is well worth your time to cultivate mechanically for the amount of time
and labor you save.

More Related Content

PPTX
Furrow openers
PDF
Agriculture Engineering-chptr13
PDF
Farm and human power REPORT - AE 215-SOURCES OF FARM POWER
PDF
Increasing productivity and drought resilence with green manure/cover crops
PPT
English Agriculture
PPTX
In pictures: The 2019 Africa RISING Tanzania monitoring visit
PPSX
Smart Green Revolution
Furrow openers
Agriculture Engineering-chptr13
Farm and human power REPORT - AE 215-SOURCES OF FARM POWER
Increasing productivity and drought resilence with green manure/cover crops
English Agriculture
In pictures: The 2019 Africa RISING Tanzania monitoring visit
Smart Green Revolution

Viewers also liked (7)

PPTX
Acorn poultry
PPTX
31.pine apple fruit varities in the world By Allah Dad Khan
PDF
Reekie Powerpoint
PPTX
two spotted mite
PPTX
Presentation on Apple as a commodity
PPTX
Predatory and Spider mite interaction
PPT
Anju basera(apple)
Acorn poultry
31.pine apple fruit varities in the world By Allah Dad Khan
Reekie Powerpoint
two spotted mite
Presentation on Apple as a commodity
Predatory and Spider mite interaction
Anju basera(apple)
Ad

Similar to Mechanical weedingpanel 2013 (20)

PPTX
Advances in agricultural technology
PDF
Basics of Farm machinery and power engineering
PDF
Farm Machinery and Power Engineering: Description, principles and specifications
PDF
Farming with Vintage Tractors
DOC
Hammermeister weed management_2013
PDF
Climate smart agricultural machinery
PPTX
Mechanization in agriculture
PDF
Alternative cover crop seeding technologies
PPTX
POST HARVEST Threshing equipment PPT 2.pptx
PPTX
Land-Preparation (1).pptxmnzxvbnz nz zzn
PPT
No-till farming and the search for sustainability in dryland agriculture
PDF
A review of research with the “foundations for farming system” of conservatio...
PDF
A review of research with the “foundations for farming system” of conservatio...
PPTX
Conservation agriculture techniques in animal traction systems
PDF
Roller crimper designs for cover crops
PDF
Conservation Tillage
PPTX
MECHANIZATION OF AGRICULTURE
PPTX
AGROTECHNOLOGY.pptx
DOCX
conservation agriculture ; concept and technology intervention
PDF
The International Journal of Engineering and Science (The IJES)
Advances in agricultural technology
Basics of Farm machinery and power engineering
Farm Machinery and Power Engineering: Description, principles and specifications
Farming with Vintage Tractors
Hammermeister weed management_2013
Climate smart agricultural machinery
Mechanization in agriculture
Alternative cover crop seeding technologies
POST HARVEST Threshing equipment PPT 2.pptx
Land-Preparation (1).pptxmnzxvbnz nz zzn
No-till farming and the search for sustainability in dryland agriculture
A review of research with the “foundations for farming system” of conservatio...
A review of research with the “foundations for farming system” of conservatio...
Conservation agriculture techniques in animal traction systems
Roller crimper designs for cover crops
Conservation Tillage
MECHANIZATION OF AGRICULTURE
AGROTECHNOLOGY.pptx
conservation agriculture ; concept and technology intervention
The International Journal of Engineering and Science (The IJES)
Ad

More from acornorganic (20)

PPTX
Organic Poultry Symposium - Tim Livingstone
PPTX
Organic Poultry Symposium - Tom Byers
PPTX
Organic Poultry Symposium - Sally Bernard
PDF
V3 organic control options
PPT
V1 fertility and rotations
PPTX
L4 forage mixtures
PPTX
L3 small cows
PPTX
L1 halaal meat
PDF
B4 cost of production
PDF
B3 record keeping
PPTX
B2 farm succession
PDF
B1 nurturing your relationship
PDF
Se4 improving greenhouse practices
PDF
Se3 greenhouse management in nb
PPTX
S3 on-farm plant breeding i
PPT
S4 plant breeding ii mazourek
PPTX
S2 dynamics of proprietary seed mazourek acorn
PPTX
S1 stock seed
PPTX
Fm4 farmers market vendor success
PPTX
Fm3 business skills smart habits
Organic Poultry Symposium - Tim Livingstone
Organic Poultry Symposium - Tom Byers
Organic Poultry Symposium - Sally Bernard
V3 organic control options
V1 fertility and rotations
L4 forage mixtures
L3 small cows
L1 halaal meat
B4 cost of production
B3 record keeping
B2 farm succession
B1 nurturing your relationship
Se4 improving greenhouse practices
Se3 greenhouse management in nb
S3 on-farm plant breeding i
S4 plant breeding ii mazourek
S2 dynamics of proprietary seed mazourek acorn
S1 stock seed
Fm4 farmers market vendor success
Fm3 business skills smart habits

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
A Presentation on Touch Screen Technology
PDF
Enhancing emotion recognition model for a student engagement use case through...
PDF
Zenith AI: Advanced Artificial Intelligence
PDF
WOOl fibre morphology and structure.pdf for textiles
PDF
Profit Center Accounting in SAP S/4HANA, S4F28 Col11
PDF
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
PDF
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25-Week II
PDF
DASA ADMISSION 2024_FirstRound_FirstRank_LastRank.pdf
PDF
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
PDF
gpt5_lecture_notes_comprehensive_20250812015547.pdf
PPTX
Programs and apps: productivity, graphics, security and other tools
PDF
A comparative study of natural language inference in Swahili using monolingua...
PPTX
SOPHOS-XG Firewall Administrator PPT.pptx
PPTX
cloud_computing_Infrastucture_as_cloud_p
PPTX
Tartificialntelligence_presentation.pptx
PDF
ENT215_Completing-a-large-scale-migration-and-modernization-with-AWS.pdf
PDF
1 - Historical Antecedents, Social Consideration.pdf
PDF
Getting Started with Data Integration: FME Form 101
PPTX
1. Introduction to Computer Programming.pptx
PPTX
OMC Textile Division Presentation 2021.pptx
A Presentation on Touch Screen Technology
Enhancing emotion recognition model for a student engagement use case through...
Zenith AI: Advanced Artificial Intelligence
WOOl fibre morphology and structure.pdf for textiles
Profit Center Accounting in SAP S/4HANA, S4F28 Col11
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25-Week II
DASA ADMISSION 2024_FirstRound_FirstRank_LastRank.pdf
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
gpt5_lecture_notes_comprehensive_20250812015547.pdf
Programs and apps: productivity, graphics, security and other tools
A comparative study of natural language inference in Swahili using monolingua...
SOPHOS-XG Firewall Administrator PPT.pptx
cloud_computing_Infrastucture_as_cloud_p
Tartificialntelligence_presentation.pptx
ENT215_Completing-a-large-scale-migration-and-modernization-with-AWS.pdf
1 - Historical Antecedents, Social Consideration.pdf
Getting Started with Data Integration: FME Form 101
1. Introduction to Computer Programming.pptx
OMC Textile Division Presentation 2021.pptx

Mechanical weedingpanel 2013

  • 1. 2013 ACORN Conference Delta Beauséjour, Moncton NB Workshop Title: Mechanical Weeding Techniques Speakers & their titles:Josh Oulton (Tap Root Farms, NS), Michael Carr (Jemseg River Farm, NB), Kent Coates (Nature's Route Farm, NB) Executive Summary This presentation featured guest speakers from three different farms. Each guest speaker presented for 15 minutes on the methods they use on their farms to mechanically cultivate, as well as other methods of weed control and prevention that they use. There was a brief discussion at the end about where each farmer gave his input about when to start using mechanical cultivation, and what it has done for them in terms of efficiency. Detailed Notes Michael Carr, Jemseg River Farm Jemseg River Farm is in its 4th production year, with 8 acres under cultivation. Their main crops are veggies, potatoes, and strawberries. Almost everything on the farm is planted in two rows(except for strawberries and brussel sprouts) Approach to Weed Control: Initially Michael thought about adopting the Eliot Coleman style of production, and to start using a BCS walk-behind tractor. He decided in the end that it was impractical because of their larger scale and the number of rocks in soil. He made the decision to use tractors because he grew up with them and is comfortable working with them. Tractors: 11 horsepower Farmall '79 is main cultivation tool: • Uses a midpoint cultivator, which is easier to cultivate with rather than with a 3point hitch. An implement that is set up onto a 3-point hitch will swing in the opposite direction as you are turning which could run over your crops during cultivation • Cultivator, plow, mower, manure spreader cost $3500 altogether. • Motor is offset to one side so you can see what is directly below you as you're on the tractor • Cultivates a two-row bed in two passes Also owns a 23 horsepower Farmall, but it's not working at the moment. Also owns a 28 horsepower Kubota • Diesel powered, and has a three point hitch • More power
  • 2. 2013 ACORN Conference Delta Beauséjour, Moncton NB Michael uses the tractor to mark rows before planting. Everything needs to be straight to cultivate with a tractor. It takes approximately one hour to cultivate ~3/4 acre, and costs ~$4 each time in fuel. Mechanical cultivation is by far worth investing in for them because of the amount of labor it saves. They hardly use any of their time hand weeding. Other forms of weed control: Diamond hoes from Lee Valley; and cover cropping. Youtube: Farmers and their weed control machines (refer to slide show) Josh Oulton, Tap Root Farms Methods of weed control: First and foremost, Tap Root Farms spends a lot of time hand weeding. They use straw mulch and black plastic mulches on the high tunnel tomatoes and peppers to eliminate weeds in the beds. They also plant a mixture of rye and clover in some of their alleys, and whipper snip midway through the season. For smaller crops, such as spinach, they will use the wheel hoe. In addition to mulching the high tunnel tomatoes and peppers, they use biotello in for a lot of their field crops. Biotello is probably their main weed control tool. Mechanical cultivation techniques: In the cases where they do use mechanical cultivation, Josh will set up the tractor with the cultivator on the front and the Reigion the back. They will often use the Reigifor cole crops, or anything else that's planted at a 32” spacing. Most of their cole crops are cultivated at least 3 times. Preparing beds: To standardize the spacing between the rows and to make them as straight as possible for cultivation, he will mark rows behind the tractor with a pair of chains while he is defining the bed. Next he will follow over the rows with the Jang seeder. Flame weeding: They use flame weeding as a cultivation tool, but they have decided to rethink how they do it. Sometimes they use an Earthway seeder, which easily gets clogged up with residues on the soil surface while seeding. Instead of flaming the weeds on the bed right before seeding, their plan for next year is to allow the weeds on the bed to germinate, and then to seed directly into the bed. Then after a few days he will flame weed and kill the weeds without harming the germinating seeds.
  • 3. 2013 ACORN Conference Delta Beauséjour, Moncton NB Kent Coates, Nature's Route Farm Nature's RouteFarm uses cover crops, rotations, handweeding and hoe weeding as control strategies in addition to mechanical cultivation. Cover cropping: Cover crops are a very important aspect of Nature's RouteFarm’s weed control strategy. Generally they will use a buckwheat-fall rye rotation, where the buckwheat will be followed by fall planted rye, and veggies will be planted the following year. They also plant fall rye in the wheel tracks (alleys) of the carrot beds. 2012 was too dry to put in cover crops, and as a result 2013 involved a lot of hoeing and handweeding, which stresses the importance of cover crops in reducing the weed population in the seed bed. Cover crops are also important for breaking down sod and preparing the soil for planting. Seed bed preparation: Kent will make his beds with a bed shaper, and will stale seed bed for 7days. Afterwards he will go in with a small hiller in front of the tractor, and will plant behind into the furrows with a seeder (refer to video in Kent's slides). They use three mounted Planet Juniors for seeding, and standardize their beds so that everything is seeded 3 rows per bed, into 3 trenches. Rows must be parallel and straight in order to cultivate mechanically. A note about tractor cultivation: Kent mounts his S-tine cultivator onto the front of tractor to avoid taking out plants while steering. (For instance, if the cultivator is on the back, turn right and tool turns left). This is the same problem Michael Carr addresses by using a midpoint cultivator. On a three-point hitch there is more control if the tool is in the front of the tractor or under the wheels. Kent sums up his most important factors for weed control in the last slide 1.Cover crops 2.Seed bed prep 3.Parallel (straight) rows 4.Control of cultivation 5.Timing Finally, he estimates that mechanical cultivation has saved 20-30 hrs per week of hand weeding. All of the farmers on the panel agree that if your farm owns a tractor, it is well worth your time to cultivate mechanically for the amount of time and labor you save.