Post-Harvest Review Precision Ag Management Comes Of Age MOLINE, 111. It’s har vest. The smell of fall in the air and more than a little bit of grain chaff, too! A com bine hums smoothly in the distance as it makes its way down the field. But when the tractor and grain cart are summoned, there’s no one around to jump in and go. Where are the farm hands? Because this tractor is driverless, it starts up, uses global positioning satellites (GPS) to locate the combine, and makes its way safely through the field. When it ar rives alongside the combine, the grain is deposited into the cart on the go. Next, the tractor pulls the load back to its resting spot and shuts down. You can bet there are busy farm hands around but they’re not in the tractor cab. Satellites and software have just given them a whole new job description. This concept isn’t that far out. Twenty years ago, no one had even heard of GPS or Precision agriculture is not a single technology, noted, which farmers can use to improve decision said Dr. Kent Olsen, Department of Applied Econom- making in agricultural production, marketing, ics, University of Minnesota. It*s a “suite of manage- finance, and personnel management, ment strategies, technologies, and practices,” he geographic positioning sys tems unless you were an engineer at NASA. Today, this is a part of our everyday lives. Companies such as John Deere must continually think to the future with ideas such as the driverless tractor and much more. However, the real ingenuity comes when a concept becomes viable as a product offering. Precision agriculture’s technology potential has been discussed for several years. But producers and experts now agree that unless a new technology can add dollars to the bottom line today, such hi-tech tools are really no more than a hi-tech diver sion. Technologies such as GPS, real-time yield monitors, multilayer field mapping software, and variable-rate seeding and chemical appli cation systems are readily available on the open market and each promise specific ADVERTISEMENT benefits. Yet, Dr. Kent Olson, Department of Applied Eco nomics, University of Minne sota, contends that producers must look beyond individual tools to realize the benefits of precision agriculture. He said producers should think of precision agriculture as a holistic approach to farm management. “Once you start learning about all the fancy gizmos, it’s easy to think about new technology as merely the pur chase of another machine another combine, another tractor, said Olson. “But technology such as precision agriculture is more than me chanical and physical ex pertise —much more.” In fact, precision agricul ture is not a single technol ogy, said Olson, but a “suite of management strategies, technologies, and practices” that farmers can use to im prove decision making in ag ricultural production, marketing, finance, and per ADVERTISEMENT Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, Novembar 4, 2000-A23 sonnel management. Olson said the key to making precision agriculture work lies in understanding how to integrate the technol ogy and apply site-specific in formation in making decisions that meet whole farm management goals. Generally, those goals in volve boosting efficiency and profitability. John Deere seems to have taken Olson’s assessment of precision agriculture to heart, and it recently formed a spe cial program and team of people to deal specifically with creating a precision ag riculture package that in tegrates technology into farm equipment in a manner that meets the farmer’s business goals. Barry Schaffter, vice presi dent of this new precision ag riculture group at John Deere called Agricultural Manage ment Solutions (AMS), said, “The potential for this tech nology is amazing, and part of what we do is research new applications for these tools, such as the driverless tractor, for example. But customers want more than potential, and they tell us that if we can’t show them how to save a dime with a new technol ogy, they don’t want to put another nickel into the ma chinery.” To accomplish this task, the AMS group looks at the whole farm to help producers identify solutions in produc tion, equipment manage ment, agronomic practices, and farm business manage ment. Part of this is creating pre cision ag components that work together and are easy to operate. After all, if a new technology is not easy to use, it won’t be used, stresses Schaffter. But ultimately, said Terry Porter, John Deere AMS marketing mana ger, the goal of AMS, or any precision agriculture system, is to supply producers with the right kind of information and the means to analyze and apply that information to make better and more profitable management decisions. As an example, consider a task as basic as seed selection and purchasing for the coming planting season. With the proper technology, a farmer can turn this simple task into a way to reduce costs, save time, and eventu ally increase yields. “In this case, you need a simple way to collect real time, site-specific informa tion such as field conditions, tillage practices, seed varie ties planted, and weather conditions,” said Porter. He recommends the John Deere Field Doc data collection system, which works in con cert with Deere’s Star Fire re ceiver, Green Star display, and on-board mobile data processor. “It allows you to make notes on the go, and it’s geo referenced, so every time the operator records information or makes changes, the system tags that data to a specific lo cation in the field,’* said Porter. To continue this scenario, producers then download data from Field Doc to their desktop computer and use JDmap Deluxe software to analyze the information. Ac cording to Porter, JDmap translates raw field data into site-specific multilayer maps and summaries the producer uses to match seed perform ance to seeding rates, ferti lizer and chemical appli cation rates, tillage practices, soil types, and field drainage. “One great feature of the software is that it allows op-