"Saving Dollars,
Making Sense"
Prices are rising for just about everything
these days, and fertilizer costs in particular
have skyrocketed. Increased input
costs make it critical that growers get
their money’s worth from their crop nutrition
programs.
But now T-Systems International, the manufacturer
of T-Tape® drip tape, has a solution: CropSense Technologies. CropSense provides
growers with pertinent data on soil moisture as well as field-specific information
on a crop’s fertility needs at a specific growth stage. These programs monitor the
soil’s moisture and nutrient levels, keeping fertilizer costs in check and helping preserve the environment along the way.
T-Tape dealer Ray Vincent, of Vincent Farms in
Delaware, began using these technologies to
better manage root development on his farm.
Plants with healthy roots are better equipped
to take up fertilizer and water, especially as
temperatures rise and the plant becomes
stressed. By determining exact nutrient needs,
Vincent was able to substantially reduce his
fertilizer expenses.
Asked if he uses this technology as a validation
tool, Vincent says it is much more than
that. “We are using CropSense
Technology as a decision-making
tool.”
Instant Answers
To ensure his crops are developing healthy roots, Vincent,
who runs the farm with his brother Clay and father Tom,
needs to know if he is irrigating efficiently and isn’t over or
under watering. To gather that information on his 500 acres of watermelon,
pepper, fresh market tomatoes, and cantaloupes,
Vincent uses CropSense Moisture
Management Technology, offering real-time,
in-depth information on soil moisture levels.
This data is taken from the soil via moisture
probes that are placed in fields at various
depths. The soil information is then downloaded
from the probes and transmitted via
telemetry to his personal computer. The data,
in turn, helps Vincent determine the exact irrigation
scheduling needed to adequately fill
the root zone without pushing water and
nutrients out of the target area.
Focus On Field-Specific Needs
“We got familiar with the Moisture
Management Technology and then last year
we implemented a Quick Soil and SAP testing
regiment every two weeks,” says Vincent.
Every two weeks during the growing season,
Vincent shipped soil tests from each of
Vincent Farms’ 19 fields overnight to
T-Systems’ lab in California, where they were
analyzed by in-house CCA-certified agronomists.
Within a few days, Vincent received
feedback via the Internet on the current status
of the plant, and the fertility condition of his
soil as well.
In addition to sending the Quick Soil and
SAP analysis to Vincent, T-Systems also sent
the test results to Miller Chemical & Fertilizer
Corp. in Hanover, PA. Miller Chemical specializes
in nutritional agrochemicals. Randy
Edwards, national accounts manager at Miller
Chemical, works closely with Vincent. “Randy
looks at recommendations and then figures out
what mix should be applied to that field over
the next two weeks,” Vincent says.
“We are using CropSense Technology
as a decision-making tool.”
Miller Chemical analyzed the results and
developed a nutritional “prescription” for
plant needs based on each field’s condition,
and then determined the formula to be fed
through the drip tape.
From the tests, Vincent
learned that he had a
phosphorus deficiency.
With the help of
T-Systems
and Miller
Chemical, Vincent
learned that even
though soil tests
showed high levels of
phosphorus, the phosphorus
was not readily
available to his crops.
One of Edwards’ jobs
was to make the phosphorus
available to the
plant. “Vincent Farms
has high soil phosphorus
levels, and those
high phosphorus levels
are potential contaminants
to the ground water,” Edwards
explains. “That means we can’t add too
much phosphorus to the soil.
“We’re using biological chemistry to make
phosphorus more available to the plant,” he
explains. “We are reproducing what plant
microbes produce — carbon chain acids that
literally help the plant absorb those nutrients
and make them more available to the plant.”
“T-Systems brings to the table a road map of
what the plant needs at a given time,”
Edwards says, “and what we bring to the
table is the ability to fill that need.”
The next step brought in the local United Agri
Products (UAP) distributor. Once Miller
Chemical determined the necessary nutrient
profile, UAP formulated a nutrient solution.
According to Danny LeCates, UAP sales
account manager, providing Vincent Farms
with field-specific nutrients every two weeks
gives the grower a better handle on what fertilizer
is needed at a given time. “It also
gives [Vincent Farms] a good read on what
that crop is extracting from the soil as the
fruit matures.”
Significant Savings
2005 was a challenging growing season,
which changed from cool and wet to stifling
hot within a few days — so Vincent says he
didn’t see much of an increase in yield last
season. What he did see, however, was a
substantial cost saving on fertilizer. “We
nearly cut our fertilizer bill in half,” he says.
Along with that reduced fertilizer bill, the
farm is now more environmentally conscious.
Vincent says that phosphorous leaching into
the groundwater and into the Chesapeake
Bay has been a problem in the area for
about 10 years. “Thanks to this program, we
now have a more environmentally friendly
way of applying fertilizer,” he says.
Had he had continued with his old fertility
program, he may have over-fertilized his
crops, Vincent says. He adds that under “normal”
(warmer and drier) weather conditions,
he expects to see yields increase.
Vincent isn’t the only grower who sees the
advantages of CropSense Technologies.
Edwards notes that a number of other growers
in Delaware, the Carolinas, and Georgia
have expressed interest in the program.
What type of grower will benefit the most
from this technology? Says Edwards, “It is for
someone who is willing to take an intensive
approach to farming. Growers willing to
monitor the details will benefit the most.”
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