Monday, April, 15, 2013–Packing the Rows

Terry packed rows last night and this morning!

PAcking-roaws-1

Our soil is rather strange….if it rains (and we have had a nice 1 inch rain) the water stops going down the furrows.

Weird, but true.

Even though the rows were packed BEFORE the rain, he had to go back out and do it all over again.

Packing-rows-2

Terry like to use a Mormon Creaser, which is a tool that helps square up the row and packs down the walls and bottom of the furrow so the water can flow on through.  Sometimes he just drives the tractor up and down the rows, it depends on what the furrow looks like when he gets there.

(See the tractor turning around?  The tires mess up the rows so the irrigater has to make sure and dig out those furrows by hand or a flood mess will occur.  Also, right at the gate – the siphon tube – the furrow has to be dug out so the water understands which row to head down)

Packing-rows-3

The wind is kicking up a fuss today and it looks like there are storms in the mountains and canyons surrounding us…storms made of water is a very nice thought. It’s also cold.   The weather man says we have a huge winter storm coming in complete with 45 mph winds and bitter temperatures.  By Wednesday we should see snow, or at least as snow and rain mix.

We will not stop irrigating even if the rain and snow come in—another weird but true fact of farming in our part of the high mountain desert. (the secret is High and Mountain and Desert…)

The little rain here freshened up everything, even if it slowed down the irrigation.  We will just keep on plodding along.

Some of the farmers are going to ‘go for the gold’ and plant 70% of their acres, but we are staying with the 60%, we would hate to lose a crop just because we tried to bluff our way through.  By the middle of May we will know if we want to go ahead and add another 10% of our acreage.  It’s a toss up if we plant pinto beans or alfalfa…it all depends on water — how much and for how long or if there will even be any.

Heading out now to do some things, I hope all of you have a good Monday.

Linda

 

Mormon Creasing — Step 11

morman-creasing-the-corn

A Mormon creaser is a type of marker.  It not only marks out the furrow, it also flattens the rows (slightly packs the top of the rows) making a better environment for the little seeds.

 

This is an older photo; I wasn’t able to get one today, of DH backing the tractor out with the Mormon Creaser attached.  It has a long flat bar with shovels attached.  

 

Even though you are seeing the process for corn, the same steps exist for the bean ground.  Alfalfa will be planted with oats as a mother crop and has slightly different planting steps.  Not a lot of difference, but some.  For instance, Mormon Creasing is not used on grain or alfalfa fields, but a broadcasting method. 

 

racoons

 

One of the fun things about working in the fields is you get to see lots of wildlife or evidence of wildlife.  Raccoons like to wash their food in the ditches, we have lots of ground birds that lay their eggs in the fields, and every once in awhile I get to see either a fox or a coyote.

killdear-nest

 

This morning, while coming back from a head gate, a beautiful red fox ran alongside of the dog and I on the four-wheeler.  OF COURSE I didn’t have the camera, because I am always afraid I will drop the darn thing in the water.  But it was thrilling anyway!  Thrilling for the dog, he whined and barked, probably gave the fox a huge fright, and thrilling for me just to be so up-close-and-personal to the fox!