Subsurfer incorporates dry manure I Key Points

26 / www.FarmProgress.com – October 2011
Dakota Farmer
Crops
Subsurfer incorporates dry manure
By DON McCABE
I
S it the next-generation manure applicator, or is it limited to only poultry
litter?
That remains to be seen, but the
Subsurfer prototype garnered a lot of interest at the North American Manure Expo
in Norfolk, Neb., in mid-July.
Designed by Dan Pote, a USDA
Agriculture Research Service soil scientist, the applicator is one of the first to
incorporate dry manure — poultry litter
— into the soil. Heretofore, manure injection and incorporation have been limited
AUGERS ON BOARD: These parallel
augers in the bed of the Subsurfer
bring the material forward and help in
pulverizing it.
Key Points
■ USDA soil scientist develops a prototype
tool to incorporate dry manure.
■ Most of the research has been done using
poultry litter.
■ The applicator was demonstrated at the
Manure Expo in Norfolk, Neb.
to the liquid or slurry variety.
Pote, based in Boonville, Ark., spoke
at the expo and demonstrated the implement, applying dry feedlot manure in it for
the first time.
The Subsurfer is not commercially
available, but prototypes built by BBI, a
Cornelia, Ga., company, have been tested
in Chesapeake Bay states in the Northeast.
In tests in Southern states, it incorporated
poultry litter on pastures, although some
work has been done on no-till corn.
The applicator comes with a box
that can hol d up to 5 tons of poultry
litter. Parallel augers in the bed draw the
manure forward and pulverize it, then
drop it through tubes between double-disk
openers in front of the box. The incorporation components are corn planter units,
with no-till coulters, double-disk openers
and closing wheels.
Changing speed of the augers changes
the application rate, according to Pote.
“There is very little disturbance [in a pasture], with only a small slot created. It’s
deep enough to prevent the poultry litter
SOIL INCORPORATION: This Subsurfer prototype was demonstrated at the North
American Manure Expo in Norfolk, Neb. In a short demonstration, it incorporated dry
feedlot manure into the soil.
from running off the field. It’s also deep
enough to prevent most nutrient losses.”
In the research, Pote found that the subsurface application of litter lowers nutrient
runoff and ammonia emissions by at least
90%. It also was shown to increase forage
yields slightly.
“The only way to apply dry product in
the past is to surface apply it, leaving the
potential for runoff or nutrient loss,” he
said.
Tom Way, an ARS scientist in Auburn,
Ala., has developed a different prototype of a poultry litter soil incorporator for row-crop use. He can adjust
Strip Till Expo shows how
to save time and resources
M
By JONATHAN EISENTHAL
ORE than 200 farmers attended
the Minnesota Strip Till Expo last
month in Owatonna, Minn., and
had the chance to observe nine different
strip-tillage systems. The University of Minnesota Extension and Riverland Community
College sponsored the daylong event.
One Minnesota farmer got into strip
tillage more than a decade ago and likes
how it revives the soil, returning it closer to
its natural state. Plus, it is less work.
Success with strip tillage, he said, depends almost entirely on the structure
of the berm created by the coulters that
follow the shank on the tillage machine.
Some machines create a quasi-ridge, while
others leave a small depression along the
strip. There are adherents for both.
Another farmer, Tim Dritz from Lincoln
County, Minn., said less fuel, reduced
phosphorus and potassium inputs, and
less wear and tear on the equipment all
appealed to him. He uses strip tillage on
the lighter soils at his farm in Hendricks.
However, heavier, wetter soils pose more
of a challenge to get planted in a timely
way, so he still goes with conventional
tillage on those acres.
U-M Extension educator Brad Carlson,
who organized the expo, has been studying
strip tillage since 1999. He said that more
operators who do strip tillage use precision agriculture technology and methods.
These can improve yields and give the
farmer a better understanding of “how
money moves through his operation.”
“GPS autosteer gives that comfort level
to plant right on the strip,” Carlson said.
University of Tennessee strip-till research
found a 7-bushel-per-acre increase when
RTK-type technology was used.
Most farmers who do strip tillage do
their own fertilizer application, rather than
hiring it out to a cooperative or custom
operator, Carlson said. With that level of
control, it’s easier for farmers to customize
fertilizer product mixes and rates when
working with yield and profit maps.
He noted that strip tillage reduces
soil erosion because two-thirds to threequarters of the field remains covered with
residue.
“Raindrop impact is easy to overlook,”
Carlson said. “But each drop that falls
and hits the soil loosens some particles.
Multiply that by millions of drops and you
can have a major effect. With the residue in
place, the raindrops don’t impact the soil.”
Jodi DeJong-Hughes, also a U-M
Extension educator, said studies confirm
and quantify numerous benefits to this
conservation-tillage method. Strip tillage
takes an average of five passes, as opposed
to nine required for both chisel plow-disk
ripper cultivation and moldboard plowing.
It also saves the farmer an average of $25
an acre in fuel and machine costs.
She noted that, though strip-tillage
equipment is a little less easy to come by
than conventional equipment, there are
at least 18 different manufacturers out
there, with machines ranging in price from
$15,000 to $120,000, making strip tillage
a technology that’s available to farmers
across a range of incomes and scales.
“Fuel use is reduced, repairs are less,
and total machinery ownership cost falls,”
said Gene Kuntz, a farm business management instructor at South Central College.
An ideal seedbed
Agronomically, strip tillage improves water
infiltration the first season. Within three to
four seasons, it changes the soil condition
and creates a mellower soil that makes an
ideal seedbed, DeJong-Hughes said. She
showed the results from a strip-till study
of corn on corn at five southern Minnesota
locations over a number of years that
showed yields kept on a par with other
tillage methods.
A noon-hour panel discussion featuring
four farmers offered practical advice for
operators. The discussion attracted both
seasoned farmers and those considering
getting into strip tillage for the first time.
Bruce Ponwith, a farmer in Cleveland,
row spacing with his implement.
Chris Henry, University of NebraskaLincoln Extension engineer and cochairman of the expo, said the Subsurfer
performed well in a short demo. The
manure was scrapped off the pad in a
nearby feedlot and was drier than feedlot
manure would normally be, he said.
Henry said the commercial application
of feedlot manure on a large scale below
the soil surface is several years down the
road. He believes feedlot manure would
need to preconditioned in some way, either
by composting or by use of a device that
removes large chunks of the product.
CHECKING OUT STRIP TILL: Scores
of farmers turned out for demonstrations
and classes at the 2011 Strip Till Expo
last month in Owatonna, Minn.
Minn., does a combination of ridge- and
strip-till cultivation. In the fall, he takes
one pass with a ridge cultivator and then
a second with the strip tiller to place
fertilizer, and then he’s ready to go next
spring. He has been able to reduce P and
K, starting at 75% of broadcast rates and
slowly dropping it lower from there.
“Getting fertilizer just where I want it is
huge,” Ponwith said. He has seen far less
nutrient loss in wet years when using his
strips-on-ridges technique. “I get better
yield in those wet years, and it’s more environmentally friendly.”
Luke Scherger, a Dodge Center, Minn.,
farmer, said he has seen a 10- to 20-bushel
increase by getting fertilizer placed exactly
where plants need it.
“I like having to do fewer passes across
the field, and the benefits to conservation
by having the residue,” said John Bonde
of Nerstrand, Minn. “I like to see the soil
develop its own natural drainage.”
Eisenthal writes from St. Paul, Minn.