Page 6—Corn Talk, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 14, 2000 Capitol Region gronomy Team (Continued from Pago 1) and poorly prepared land, rye out performs all other cover crops. Benefits • Nutrients. Rye is the best cool season cereal for absorb ing soil nitrogen. Its fast growing, fibrous root system can take up and hold as much as 100-pounds per acre, but typically 25 to 50- pounds of nitrogen until spring. Rye increases the con centration of exchangeable potassium near the surface of the soil by bringing it up from lower in the soil profile. • Soil stability. Along with conservation tillage practices, rye provides soil protection on sloping fields and holds soil loss to a tolerable level. • Versatile. In our region, rye can serve as an over wintering cover crop after corn, before or after soy beans, fruits or vegetables. It is not the best choice before a small grain crop, such as wheat or barley, unless you can kill the rye reliably and completely, because volun teer rye seed would lower the *"> / ‘i V I ■% / v 7 i Your Hoffman Seeds dealer wants to help you save on your next seed corn purchase. When you buy 10 bags of any NK® Brand seed corn before November 30, 2000, you'll get 2 EXTRA BAGS ABSOLUTELY FREE. See your Hoffman/NK® Brand dealer for details. IQJ i nnovatlveS oumo„ s value of other grains. • Organic matter. Rye provides up to 10,000-pounds of dry matter per acre with 3,000 to 4,000-pounds typical in the Northeast. • Weed suppressor. In cool seasons, rye is one of the best for out competing weeds, especially small seeded, light sensitive annuals such as lambsquarters, redroot pigweed, velvetleaf, chickweed, and foxtail. Rye also suppresses many weeds allelopathically (as a natural herbicide), including dande lions and Canada thistle. • Pest suppressor. Rye re duces insect pest problems in rotations and attracts signifi cant numbers of beneficials such as lady bugs. Establishment Drill one to two bushels per acre no deeper than two inches deep or broadcast one and one-half to three bushels and lightly disk or cultipack. Very late seeding rates can be up to six bushels per acre to assure an adequate stand. 7 4 > *z. Cost Farmers, Business Millions ST. LOUIS, Mo. The National Corn Growers As sociation (NCGA) is out raged by the recent announcement that the Army Corps of Engineers will delay a benchmark study on $1 bil lion in improvements on the upper Mississippi rivers. “We are not disappointed, we are livid,” said Paul Ber Killing And Controlling Rye grows and matures quickly in the spring. Tem perature and moisture deter mine maturity rate. Once rye is tall and stemmy, rye ties up nitrogen while it decomposes. The nitrogen tie-up varies di rectly with the maturity of the rye. Killing rye early, while it’s still succulent (the preboot to early-boot stage), is a way to minimize nitrogen tie-up. Killing the rye earlier, rather than later, will help reduce chance that spring rains delay killing past the preboot to boot stage. Tilling under rye at 12- inches to 18-inches usually eliminates regrowth and ni trogen tie-up. Two to three pints of a properly mixed and applied glyphosate herbicide should kill the crop. In the southern region of the Penn sylvania, this is usually in late March. Corps ’ Decision To tels, NCGA’s director of pro duction and marketing. Every farmer out there should be equally as irate, ac cording to NCGA. Farmers should be telling their con gressional representatives that the Corps’ Navigation study should continue with out delay. “The Corps has spent $54 million on this study, and what do we have to show for it? Absolutely nothing. In ac tuality, this will not be a one year delay, but will result in several years of delay. The Corps should release the in formation they have gathered for public debate and com ment.” NCGA is seeking improve ments on the Upper Missis sippi and Illinois rivers namely doubling the 600-foot lock chambers at Mississippi River Lock and Dam 25, 24, 22, 20 and 21, and at the La- Grange and Peoria locks on the Illinois River. For the past seven years, NCGA has watched the Corps of Engi neers conduct the $54 million upper Mississippi-Illinois Water Navigation Study and has attempted to be fully en gaged in the study process every step of the way, noted Bertels. “However, the Corps is ob viously not making the con- cerns of farmers a top priority,” he continued. “There can be no delay in up grading the aging and deteri orating U.S. river infrastructure. These delays cost U.S. farmers and busi ness an average of $94 mil lion per year. Without continued investments in the transportation infrastruc ture, U.S. farmers are being placed at a severe disadvan tage as foreign countries in crease their commitment to developing their agricultural export markets.” The lock and dam struc tures on the upper Missis sippi and Illinois rivers are more than 50 years old and are unable to handle the cur rent volume of barge traffic on the river. Subsequently, the resulting delays of three to four hours at each facility costs approximately $9OO per barge. “The Corps should release the current report for public review, and second, the ad- ministration has dictated that portions of the study must be revised, then the Corps must revisit each point of contention,” Bertels said. 4S& ' V - \ *