Use Data to Select Optimum Variety

Our new Maize Variety Selection Guide for 2020 will help farmers identify the most suitable maize variety and help increase the return on investment in the crop.

“With maize costing around £800/ha to grow it is vital that farmers maximise the return on this investment,” comments Tim Richmond, Maize Manager, UK and Ireland with LG Seeds.

“Whether you are in a favourable or less favourable area, there are basically three core objectives.  The first is to grow a variety that will mature early on increasing the prospect of getting it harvested in good time and allow a successor crop to be established.  The second is to ensure to produce the best yield of high-quality feed, and finally you want feed available to include the diet as early as possible in the autumn.  All these are driven by variety selection.”

With big developments in plant breeding including improvements in feed parameters like Cell Wall Digestibility, Mr Richmond says there are big benefits from looking to grow some of the newer varieties on the list.

The LG Maize Variety Selection Guide 2020

The Maize Variety Selection Guide contains data on all the varieties on the 2020 BSPB/NIAB descriptive lists with data presented in easy to understand charts, allowing quick comparison between varieties.

Tables provide information on quality characteristics including cell wall digestibility and starch content, enabling choices to be made to maximise the total feeding quality of maize silage. Vital agronomic information such as lodging, maturity and early vigour data is also included.

“The objective is to choose the varieties best suited to the farm situation which will maximise the nutrients available to feed stock next winter,” he continues.

“When making the decision, farmers have to consider a wide range of factors including maturity date, agronomic factors, yield and quality which can make it a challenging decision with a significant range of varieties available. Getting the choice right can have a major impact on the quality and quantity of forage produced which will have a significant effect on performance and margins.”

He says the benefits of growing one of the best new varieties can be significant.  Prospect which combines early maturity for a reliable harvest with exceptional yields and feed value can produce an extra 2500 litres of milk per hectare compared to the average variety, giving an additional £700/ha return from the crop.

“New varieties like TrooperGema and Resolute also deliver an exceptional return while longer established varieties like Glory still allow farmers to make an excellent return by delivering high quality feed combined with early maturity.”

Download your copy HERE

 

Choosing a good all-rounder barley

Growers in the north-west are sticking with Sienna as their barley of choice because of its good all-round qualities, says Agrovista agronomist Steven Gate.

“With Sienna there are no trade-offs or compromises. It has excellent grain quality, a good yield and a decent straw.”

Growers were recording good specific weights as high as 67kg/hectare, in last year’s challenging north-west England harvest.

Sienna yielded very well for both grain and straw, and its only weakness being that if harvest opportunities were missed due to unforeseen circumstances, such as contractors being committed elsewhere, then the variety did take a battering from the inclement weather we experienced last autumn, he said.

As well as being approved for malt distilling, it is also very popular for home feeding of livestock, in Cumbria and south west Scotland.

Soils in these arable areas are mainly light sandy loam, and their free draining characteristics are helpful to growers getting their spring barley crops drilled in late March or early April. They are then ready for harvest by late August or early September.

As with most crops, getting the seedbed right is key, with fine tilth and a good fertiliser diammonium phosphate (DaP) as well as nitrogen (N).

A target of 110kg/ha of total N is aimed at, taking into account in-depth soil sample results, field history and any organic manures applied prior to establishing the crop, says Mr Gate.

Of this, at least 1/3 of the requirement needs to be placed in the seedbed as near the seed as possible, and the remaining applied when the tramlines are visible.

Locally-held trials in 2019 showed 15-20% more tillers in crops that had received DaP, he reveals.

“This is a significant difference, and at our Open Day in July, this difference was still visible.”

He wanted to take the trial plots through to harvest to record yield, but unfortunately last year it was not possible.

“Getting the nutrient strategy right helps the crop to get away quickly too, so it has time to develop.”

“There is a lot of livestock in our area, and soil fertility and structure is kept to a good standard, thanks to applications of farmyard manure (FYM)” he notes.

He recommends aiming for 300 surviving plants/m2 for crops drilled early to mid-March, rising to 325-350 for later sown crops. Seed rates of 160-180kg/ha are recommended, depending on thousand grain weight (T.G.W).

The variety’s disease resistance is also very good, he notes.

“A split prothioconazole-based fungicide with the addition of chlorothalonil (CTL) at T2 has kept the crop clean in the past. However, with the absence of CTL going forward, we may see Ramularia pressure increase.”

Moving on to talk about tips for getting the best out of the variety, he reminds growers to include a PGR programme to keep it standing.

“It can get a little bit tall, so you need to keep the height manageable, but the straw length remains good afterwards.”

“Overall, Sienna is a really good variety to work with; it is clean and it goes through the combine well.”

 

 

John Maxwell of J G Maxwell & Son c2 seed producers in Dumfriesshire says:

 

Sienna performs very well for us and our customers, producing a good bold grain along with good amounts of straw which suits the requirements of mixed farmers in south west Scotland.”

 

 

Richard and Geoff Graham of Egremont put all their 50ha of spring barley to Sienna and have done for a number of years.

 

Richard says: “We like the grain yield and quality that Sienna produces, along with the good amount of straw.”

“A great all-rounder.”

Why LG Diablo is making strides into the malting barley market

LG Diablo, which was recommended in 2018 and achieved full approval for distilling in 2019, is set to make significant in-roads into the spring barley acreage this spring and claim its place as a mainstream variety.

As with all malting barley’s, there is a considerable time lag between recommendation and market take-up. However this does give growers and end-users time to see how the variety really performs from one year to another, explains Dr Steve Hoad, of the SRUC.

“Newcomer LG Diablo is giving the end-users the confidence to break up the market dominance held by Concerto and more latterly Laureate, based on what they have seen from the variety over the last few years as it goes through testing and evaluation.”

“As a dual purpose variety with its very good grain and malting quality, LG Diablo ticks all the right boxes, and the results so far are very promising, with just the final hurdle of brewing approval to come later this spring,” he adds.

 

Don Peters, seed manager for Scotgrain Agriculture, the procurement arm of Bairds Malt, is excited about the addition of LG Diablo to the malting barley portfolio, having had the variety in macro scale evaluation over the last two years.

LG Diablo will be one of the mainstream varieties being contracted for harvest 2020. It was the first distilling bulk we processed from the 2019 crop and we are pleased to report vigorous germination despite the relative immaturity.”

“The malt quality showed high extract and associated predicted spirit yield, so we are confident our distiller customers will be pleased with the variety when they process it.”

“One of the reasons LG Diablo processes so well is that its hot water extract is a similar level to that of Concerto – a trait that helped Concerto to become a benchmark variety. A high hot water extract is heavily desired by the end user in order for them to achieve higher sugar extraction rates from the malt and the ability to create more alcohol”, explains arable technical manager for Limagrain, Ron Granger.

LG Diablo also has a very good specific weight, which is important in the malting industry as malting is a volume-based process and low specific weights cause reduced throughput in the processing plants.”

He points out that this will be more significant than ever this spring with more barley going into the ground across the UK to make up the deficit from reduced autumn winter wheat plantings, as in times of over production, growers with low specific weight parcels will incur penalties if specifications are not met.

 

For growers and processors alike, LG Diablo’s very high yields are exciting, particularly in the north with a yield of 107%, out-performing other leading varieties such as RGT Planet and Laureate, by a significant amount, he says. LG Diablo’s untreated yields also sit at the top of the table alongside Laureate at 97% of control, and 2% over that of RGT Planet, demonstrating the variety’s very robust disease resistance profile.

“The variety has shown resilience, as shown by its consistent yield performance in the very testing seasons of 2018 and 2019.”

In terms of agronomic package, LG Diablo has straw characteristics similar to RGT Planet; medium in height (73cm) with good lodging and brackling resistance. On the 2020/21 AHDB Recommended List, LG Diablo’s maturity is rated at +1,” says Mr Granger.

 

Gordon and Graham Mackie of The Laws Farm, Kingennie, Dundee, have grown LG Diablo for two seasons and have been so pleased with its performance, that they will up the acreage this spring.

“We talk to Bairds malt about any new varieties worth looking at and try a small area alongside our established varieties. A couple of years ago, we started growing a small area of LG Diablo alongside Chronicle and Sassy to see how it would do on our farm – and whereas before we have seen slight incremental improvements from a new variety, LG Diablo demonstrated a real step change in performance,” Gordon explains.

“We have had fantastic yields across the farm in different fields and very different seasons. Last year we had over 7.5 t/ha, and no issues with quality.”

“There’s no doubt the variety is pushing the boundaries of current yields whilst holding onto its quality specification.”

“Maturity wasn’t an issue for us, and let’s face it, we can’t harvest over 80 hectares of barley in a day, so a spread of varieties and maturities works well. We harvest the Chronicle first, then Sassy followed by LG Diablo.”

“Importantly, straw yields are also good.”

“In the wetter conditions last year, we didn’t see any skinning or brackling. We also found LG Diablo easy to handle in the combine; it thrashed well, and it flowed really easily, taking half the time to tip.”

 

Further north, the enthusiasm for LG Diablo is as strong; Stewart Grant of TW Grant, Faich-hill Farm, Gartly near Huntly, started growing a small amount of LG Diablo after being impressed with it in local trials.

“It certainly looked like it ticked all of the farmer boxes, and it has not disappointed. LG Diablo was our highest yielding variety last year, bringing in around 7.9 t/ha – well above that of Concerto and Laureate, with no quality rejections.”

Mr Grant likes to have a range of maturities so that he can spread harvest out, so last year the Concerto was harvested first, then Laureate followed by LG Diablo.

Mr Grant will aim to grow about 120 hectares of LG Diablo again this year, if not a fraction more, depending on his field sizes and will stick with the three varieties as it helps to manage risk, and spread out harvest.

This is an approach that his agronomist John Watts of Agrii fully supports. “Having such a large area down to one variety is simply not an option.”

“We adopt a “little and often” approach to fungicide use, applying three sprays at approximately three week intervals which we find gives us good, season long protection.”

“This is important not only in maximising yield but also in protecting malting quality in an area which can get significant rainfall. The 2019 growing season demonstrated this with a very wet June presenting us with lush crops carrying tremendous yield potential but with high Rhynchosporium pressure.”

“The LG Diablo responded well to our fungicide programme and delivered good yields which fell within malting specification.”

 

The Laws Farm, Kingennie, Dundee Faich-hill Farm, Gartly, Huntly
400 hectares between 3 sites 540 hectares
Rotation of potatoes (ware), wheat, spring barley, winter oats, oilseed rape, winter barley, 75 suckler herd Rotation spring & winter barley & permanent grass
Soils in good condition range from sandy loam to heavier clay loam Soils are predominantly good loamy soils
Cultivations for spring barley: conventional plough and 1 pass system with seed sown behind harrow Cultivations: Plough, drill and roll
2019 LG Diablo drilled between 28th and 30th March at a rate of 200kg/ha 2019 LG Diablo drilled beginning March at a rate of 190kg/ha
Fungicides:Kestrel (Prothioconazole + tebuconazole), Jager (Porthioconazole + trifloxystrobin), Inception Xpro (Bixafen) and Chlorothalonil Fungicides: Kestrel (Prothioconazole + tebuconazole),Helix  (prothioconazole+ spiroxamine Jager (Porthioconazole + trifloxystrobin), Inception Xpro (Bixafen) and Chlorothalonil
Herbicides:  Orient (Pendimethalin and Picolinafen) Pre-emeregence Herbicicides: Inka SX (tribnuron-methyl + thfensulfuron-methyl) Claencrop Gallifrey 3 (fluroxypyr), Axial Pro (pinoxaden)
Nutrition: 500kg/ha Yara 14:13:21 + S compound at sowing and a top dressing of 177kg/ha of 33.5% N Yara Extran at crop emergence Nutrition: 350kg/ha 10:26:26 at sowing

 

The Grants target 120kg/ha N on their malting barley so 245kg/ha Nitram is top dressed on as soon as tramlines are visible

Harvest Date: 25-08-19 Harvest Date: Beginning Sept

 

Correct variety choice allows maize to deliver in challenging circumstances

At 520 feet above sea level, on heavy clay loam soils and with over 38 inches average rainfall, Great Lakes near Holsworthy in North Devon is certainly a marginal site for growing maize. But this hasn’t stopped Nick Shadrick from achieving excellent results with the crop.

Nick Shadrick (left) with Paul Cholwill, Harpers Feeds.

Nick runs a herd of 70 cows averaging 9000 litres through a De Laval robot, but a second robot will be installed next year, and the herd size will increase to around 120. The cows graze in the summer and are fed big bales grass silage when housed. But for the last five years, maize has been an integral part of the system.

“While the cows were milking well, we thought they were capable of doing better,” comments Paul Cholwill from Harpers Feeds who advises Nick. “Milk ureas were high and so we decided the diet would benefit from more starch. As concentrates are only fed through the robot, maize silage was the obvious choice and would have rotational benefits but growing it would be a challenge.

“We had to plan for a short growing season as with heavy soils and plentiful rain we had to budget for possibly late drilling. We also needed it off early while we could still travel easily and not be left with a difficult harvest. This meant early varieties with good early vigour, but at the same time we need feed quality”

In the first year Nick grew 10 acres of Ambition as it met his criteria and he knew it grew well in the area. All field work is undertaken by local contractor F J Webber & Sons and the acreage has increased with an additional 12 acres grown on his son-in-law’s farm. As cow numbers increase, he will move to grow closer to 30 acres annually.

“We find maize fits our system well as it gives us an outlet for slurry,” Nick explains. “We don’t rush to drill, waiting until the soil has warmed up and we can work the ground down well. This year we didn’t drill until the second week in May but as we choose varieties with good early vigour, we know they will get away strongly, and by selecting early maturing varieties we can be confident of getting the crop off early most years. We have been growing continuous maize for four years.”

This year for the first time he grew the LG variety Pinnacle which is maturity class 9 (FAO 190) making it very early.  He moved from Ambition on the recommendation of Paul Cholwill who emphasised the excellent ME yield and content coupled with a high starch yield in Pinnacle.

“The crop got away well and looked good all season. When we had the crop NIR tested, the indication was that it would be fit in early October, but we had to wait for the weather and eventually harvested a few weeks later and our contractor said it was the best crop he harvested this year, averaging 18 tonnes/acre.

“The maize has analysed well at 35.5% dry matter, 11.2 MJ/ME and 31.7% starch. We are feeding around 10kg maize per cow per day along with 20kg of baled grass and some molasses in the trough.  Since going back on the maize, we have seen milk quality improve, we are averaging 30 litres per cow and the top cows are giving 50 litres plus.”

Paul Cholwill says Nick’s success demonstrates the benefit of selecting varieties carefully, taking account of the site class and growing conditions.  “Maize is not the cheapest crop to grow but you can do a lot to maximise the return on investment and exploit the benefits it can bring.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Correct Variety Choice Improves Maize Success

Taking a risk assessment approach to maize variety choice can help ensure the objectives of the crop are achieved and the return on investment is maximised.

A clearer focus on the reasons you grow maize and learning from the lessons of 2019 should form the basis of maize variety selection this season, according to Tim Richmond, Maize Manager, UK and Ireland with LG Seeds.

“As with any forage crop, the reasons for growing maize are solely about the feed produced,” Mr Richmond stresses. “The objectives of growing maize specifically are delivering a high yield of the most energy dense crop possible and ensuring it can be incorporated in diets as soon as possible in the winter, meaning it needs to be harvested in good time.

“Increasingly, aligned to this second objective is the need to be able to establish a successor crop. Variety choice is a principle driver for all these objectives.  By paying careful attention to the variety you can increase the prospects of a successful outcome.”

He says there are a number of risks that can be managed to improve the success of the crop. These include field selection, choosing fields with a better aspect and soil type and avoiding fields more prone to suffering in a wet season which increases the risk of harvesting problems.

Another risk that can be managed is poor establishment, by achieving rapid germination to get the crop away and growing quickly, while also minimising the risk of bird damage which will be more important with changes to the availability of the most commonly used bird repellents.

“Don’t select fields which may cause problems. You want a field where the soil can be worked down to a suitable tilth and then only drill when soil temperatures are consistently at a minimum 8°C at the depth the seed is to be sown, to get the seed germinated quickly. But make sure the variety you choose is suited to the farm.”

Mr Richmond says the biggest criteria determining success are usually maturity class and early vigour. He explains that early maturing varieties require fewer Ontario Heat Units to reach maturity, increasing the prospects that they will be harvested sooner in better conditions meaning silage can be incorporated into diets sooner too.

Try the heat unit calculator

“There is a 26-day spread between the earliest and latest maturing varieties on the BSPB/NIAB Descriptive List which can be the difference between harvesting in optimum conditions, producing a high-quality feed and struggling to get a crop in.

 

“Our unique OHU map available on our website allows you to see the average Heat Units for your postcode and so select varieties which will mature in time on your farm.

“Go for an early variety with good early vigour to make sure it gets away quickly and matures in good time.  Modern breeding techniques have effectively eliminated the traditional yield penalty seen with early varieties and feed quality is typically excellent, so there is little need to gamble on later maturing options.”

Widely grown varieties like Glory and Pinnacle are both maturity class 10 or FAO 190 and are high yielding with excellent starch and ME content, while newer varieties like TrooperEcho and Gema also produce quality forage from an early variety, reducing the risk of a difficult harvest.

“Prospect which is another new variety has the early maturity for a reliable harvest and produces exceptional feed value.  The combination of high yields and exceptional ME content as a result of high starch and outstanding cell wall digestibility, means that it produces enough energy on average to produce 2500 litres per hectare more than the average variety, giving an additional £700 per hectare return in investment.

“Paying close attention to variety attributes and selecting the best variety for your circumstances will be an essential step in reducing risk when growing maize and ensuring you get a crop that really delivers,” Mr Richmond concludes.

 

 

LG Skyscraper still at the top

Soft wheat, LG Skyscraper remains at the top of the AHDB 2020-21 Recommended List after another promising season, yielding 105% over controls.

LG Skyscraper has continued to demonstrate its ability to perform across a wide range of situations and environments, says Ed Flatman, senior wheat breeder for Limagrain UK.

“The variety has now shown over a series of contrasting years, its capacity to establish well and develop a good foundation in the early season, which it then converts into a consistently top yield of sound bold grain.”

Agronomically, the variety has held up well; its rating for yellow rust has held fast when many around have fallen and its brown rust rating has gone up from 5 to 6 on this year’s Recommended List.

Ed Flatman, Senior Wheat Breeder for Limagrain

LG Skyscraper also has Orange Wheat Blossom Midge resistance (OWBM) which is an important trait that is of increasing value in wheat varieties due to restrictions on insecticide products, says Mr Flatman.

LG Skyscraper’s excellent performance across the UK, once again dispels any myths surrounding soft wheats being lower yielding than hard wheats, adds Limagrain’s arable technical manager, Ron Granger.

He points out that LG Skyscraper offers a large grain and its specific weight of 76.9 kg/hl and HFN coming in at 218, makes an attractive package when compared to other feed varieties.

“As a soft wheat, LG Skyscraper has the additional benefit of distilling, which in a season when it will be critical to make as much as possible from crops in the ground, is a very valuable attribute.”

For many growers who are still looking to drill their wheat, it is worth noting that in Limagrain’s 2019 trials, LG Skyscraper was the highest performing variety in the late drilled slot. In fact, the variety has shown itself to take this poll position over three very different seasons, he points out.

LG Skyscraper can be drilled comfortably up until the end of January, and even later into February further north, but seed rates will need to adjusted accordingly.”

LG Skyscraper ticks a lot of boxes for on-farm performance and is an excellent choice for the second wheat situation,” adds Mr Granger.

Ron Granger, Arable Technical Manager for Limagrain

 

FARMER PROFILE

With a best yield of 13 t/ha, a good disease profile and flexibility on planting date, LG Skyscraper has performed very well for Peterborough-based grower, Seb Richardson.

The variety has proven itself in a testing year and plans are now to increase the acreage where it will be grown, he says.

It performed well across soil types, averaging 10 t/ha, up over the five year farm average – even where it was planted on thin ground productivity held up, providing yields of 8-9 t/ha.

“The crop was mostly drilled in the third week of October, but the last field was not drilled until mid-November but we still got close to 11 t/ha from it,” he explains.

However, he feels that given the right conditions, the yields could have been even better; “the drought early in the year held back the yields from LG Skyscraper.”

Situated on Northampton heavy clay soil, he finds a conventional tillage regime, subsoiling to break the pan, ploughing and pressing to be the most effective.

His normal routine comprises three fungicide applications, combined with the use of pre-emergence herbicides plus another for broad-leaf weed and volunteer bean control. Moreover, Mr Richardson found that while he followed a sound fertiliser regime which included micronutrients and foliar feed, he did not need to apply any special nutrients.

Moving on to talk about some of the difficulties of the 2019 growing season, he points out that lodging was not a problem despite the really heavy June rainfall.

Peterborough-based grower, Seb Richardson

“There was just one field, which had received a lot of farmyard manure the year before, where the crop went down.”

Cabbage stem flea beetle has made it no longer feasible for Mr Richardson to grow oilseed rape, so, in addition to increasing the wheat area, he is also growing more winter beans.

“We find beans make a nice entry into a first wheat,” he continues, remarking that he does not grow second wheat. “Beans can be grown in a rotation of five to seven years, and this fits with our system of growing a mixture of winter and spring crops.”

“We are very pleased with LG Skyscraper; we like both its versatility and its yield – not forgetting its disease profile helps us keep fungicide use to a minimum.”

“Next year, not only will we be growing it again ourselves, but also on the contract farm we manage.”

 

Farm Facts

Area farmed: 500 ha at home + 200 ha contract farming

Soil: Heavy clay, Grade 3 Northamptonshire soil

Crops grown: Winter wheat, winter barley, winter beans, spring barley & spring oats

Drilling dates: 20th, 21st & 22nd October, 2018

Seed rate: 425 seeds per sq. m

Nutrition: Nitram double top, DAP (Diammonium Phosphate), good spectrum micronutrients (including manganese, zinc and potassium), plus later in the season – a foliar feed with manganese and potassium.

Crop protectionHerbicides: Avadex (thiocarbamate) and Crystal (flufenacet + pendimethalin) applied pre-emergence. Also a herbicide for broad-leaf weeds, applied for bean volunteer control.

Fungicides & PGR’s: Applied at T1, T2 and T3, to control Fusarium and rust.

LG’s oilseed rape varieties claim top 6 positions on AHDB Recommended List 2020-2021

Limagrain’s UK based oilseed rape breeding programme produces the top 6 highest yielding varieties on the new AHDB Recommended List 2020-2021

It’s the top 6 positions for breeder Limagrain UK’s oilseed rape varieties on the 2020-2021 AHDB Recommended List. In pole position sits conventional variety Acacia at 109.4% of controls, this is closely followed in by hybrids; LG Ambassador (108%), LG Aurelia (107.5%) and LG Artemis (106.6%) with conventionals Aspire (105.8%) and Aardvark (105.3%) completing the top line up.

“It’s certainly an exciting time for the Limagrain OSR breeding programme as this is the first time that any breeder has achieved this leading position with this many varieties, and is a reflection of our focus on breeding high yielding, trait-loaded varieties aimed specifically for the UK farmer,” points out Vasilis Gegas, Limagrain’s OSR European Portfolio Manager.

Acacia is the highest gross output conventional variety for the east/west and north regions , with a gross output of 109.5% and 107.6%, respectively.

“The variety is very vigorous in both the autumn and spring, combined with good disease resistance and short and stiff straw,” says Dr Gegas.

Acacia is suited to the main OSR drilling window but is also useful in a late sown slot.”

LG Ambassador is the first of Limagrain’s fully loaded hybrids on the AHDB Recommended List to really show the benefits of our breeding strategy,” he continues.

“This highest yielding hybrid for the east/west (Gross Output 108.4% of control) has shown itself to perform across the UK and Europe, showing the variety is resilient across a wide geographical area.”

LG Ambassador offers an outstanding package of traits associated with Limagrain’s hybrids including; TuYV resistance, pod shatter resistance and RLM7 giving the variety strong protection against stem canker resulting in a resistance rating of 8, which along with a Light Leaf Spot resistance rating of 7, ensures growers shouldn’t lose yield in unfavourable conditions.

LG Aurelia is another of Limagrain’s fully loaded hybrids, setting a new benchmark for hybrid performance in the UK.”

Not only does LG Aurelia offer an extremely high gross output, and the Limagrain full compliment of traits such as TuYV resistance, pod shatter resistance and RLM7 against stem canker, it also offers the most robust disease resistance ratings of any variety on the AHDB recommended list with a rating of 8 for both stem canker and light leaf spot resistance.

LG Artemis is another high yielding hybrid for the east/west (106.6%) and north (106%) that once again comes with Limagrain’s standard combination of TuYV resistance, pod shatter resistance. Combined with outstanding early vigour, stiff straw, early maturity and a high oil content Artemis is certainly an interesting prospect for growers for next season.

Aspire is a conventional variety, recommended last year and offers very high gross output for the east/west and north regions – as was proven in harvest 2019 with a gross output of 105.8%.

Add to this its TuYV resistance, a strong disease profile, the opportunity to early drill, as well as short and stiff straw, and it’s clear to see that Aspire is truly a farmer friendly variety that makes for an easier harvest, with the potential to increase gross margins.

Finally, of Limagrain’s top 6 varieties on the 2020-2021 AHDB Recommended ListAardvark is a conventional variety that thinks it is a hybrid, offering high gross output potential across all regions of the UK, with a UK gross output of 105.3% over control.

It is very vigorous in both the autumn and spring, competing with hybrids. It has short and stiff straw, as well as good disease resistance.

“This excellent agronomic package makes the variety suitable for the early and main drilling window.”

2019 Harvest results confirm value of TuYV resistance

 

2019 Harvest results from trials conducted by the Association of Independent Crop Consultants (AICC) in West Wittering, showed that there was a 0.4-0.5t/ha yield advantage from varieties with TuYV resistance against those without.

Limagrain’s conventional variety Aspire, performed very well – as did the newly recommended LG Aurelia and LG Ambassador.

“In this particular trial, Aspire yielded 6.7t/ha; that’s a massive yield bonus over the 6t/ha from the non-TuYV resistant variety, Campus. LG Aurelia was just behind, yielding 6.4t/ha,” explains Peter Cowlrick, director in CCC Agronomy Ltd, who managed the trials.

In a second trial in Suffolk, the trend was the same, with TuYV resistant varieties leading the pack. LG Aurelia managed a top yield of 6.1t/ha, well above that of Campus at just above 5.6t/ha. LG Ambassador yielded just below 5.9t/ha and Aspire 5.86t/ha.

“What these results show is that with varieties such as Aspire, LG Aurelia and LG Ambassador, there is no longer the yield drag once associated with TuYV resistance – in fact, it’s quite the opposite.”

“In the south-east, where the risk of TuYV infection is very high, on some farms almost 80% of the crop going into the ground this autumn will be TuYV resistant varieties. These varieties also play an important role in IPM, as there is less reliance on insecticides, “says Mr Cowlrick.

Another Great Performance from LG Skyscraper

With a best yield of 13t/ha, a good disease profile and flexibility on planting date, LG Skyscraper has performed very well for Peterborough-based grower Seb Richardson.

The variety has proven itself in a testing year and plans are now to increase the acreage where it will be grown, he says.

It performed well across soil types, averaging 10t/ha, up over the five year farm average – even where it was planted on thin ground productivity held up, providing yields of 8-9t/ha.

“The crop was mostly drilled in the third week of October, but the last field was not drilled until mid-November but we still got close to 11t/ha from it,” he explains.

However, he feels that given the right conditions, the yields could have been even better; “the drought early in the year held back the yields from LG Skyscraper.”

Situated on Northampton heavy clay soil, he finds a conventional tillage regime, subsoiling to break the pan, ploughing and pressing to be the most effective.

His normal routine comprises three fungicide applications, combined with the use of pre-emergence herbicides plus another for broad-leaf weed and volunteer bean control. Moreover, Mr Richardson found that while he followed a sound fertiliser regime which included micronutrients and foliar feed, he did not need to apply any special nutrients.

Moving on to talk about some of the difficulties of the 2019 growing season, he points out that lodging was not a problem despite the really heavy June rainfall.

“There was just one field, which had received a lot of farmyard manure the year before, where the crop went down.”

Cabbage stem flea beetle has made it no longer feasible for Mr Richardson to grow oilseed rape, so, in addition to increasing the wheat area, he is also growing more winter beans.

“We find beans make a nice entry into a first wheat,” he continues, remarking that he does not grow second wheat. “Beans can be grown in a rotation of five to seven years, and this fits with our system of growing a mixture of winter and spring crops.

“We are very pleased with LG Skyscraper; we like both its versatility and its yield – not forgetting its disease profile helps us keep fungicide use to a minimum.”

“Next year, not only will we be growing it again ourselves, but also on the contract farm we manage.”

Farm Facts

Area farmed: 500 ha at home + 200 ha contract farming

Soil: Heavy clay, Grade 3 Northamptonshire soil

Crops grown: Winter wheat, winter barley, winter beans, spring barley & spring oats

Drilling dates: 20th, 21st & 22nd October, 2018

Seed rate: 425 seeds per sq. m

Nutrition: Nitram double top, DAP (Diammonium Phosphate), good spectrum micronutrients (including manganese, zinc and potassium), plus later in the season – a foliar feed with manganese and potassium.

Crop protection:

Herbicides: Avadex (thiocarbamate) and Crystal (flufenacet + pendimethalin) applied pre-emergence. Also a herbicide for broad-leaf weeds, applied for bean volunteer control.

Fungicides & PGR’s: Applied at T1, T2 and T3, to control Fusarium and rust.

LG Skyscraper – the variety of choice for flexible drilling

Winter wheat LG Skyscraper is quick to get going in spring and also quick to pick up tillers, says contract no-till farmer Aaron Hogsbjerg who grew the variety for the first time this year.

“We really like LG Skyscraper because it is vigorous and fits well with our no-till regime,” he says. Despite the challenging weather conditions of 2018, he achieved an average of between 9-10t/ha and compared well with other varieties grown on the Suffolk and Essex-based farms where he works.

For Aaron, planting date flexibility is a real benefit, and he reports that even the fields sown the week before Christmas went to 9t/ha. “We were chuffed to bits. We used to grow Evolution, but LG Skyscraper is streets ahead.”

A different variety sown on 25 November only did 8.5t/ha, he reports, adding that Graham works well when it is in the right place and conditions are right, but is renowned for its slow growth. “LG Skyscraper was quick to establish across the farm, and worked equally well across a number of soils, from sandy and clay loams, and even patchy light sand.”

“Since changing to a no-till regime, the improvement in the soil has been remarkable, it was now nicely friable and the crop was out of the ground in seven days.” Moreover, he remarks, even in wet weather of autumn 2019 he has been able to get on the land, and drilling through a cover crop keeps mud off the drill. However, drilling in a no-till regime can result in a few plants being lost early on, so seed rates ranged between 400 and 550 per m2, with the later drilled crops getting the higher rate.

“It sounds quite a high rate, but it gets us the results we wanted,” says Aaron. He notes that because of its height, when growing LG Skyscraper, treatment with a PGR is necessary but effective; for example despite the heavy rainfall in June 2019, none of it fell over. “This could be a problem in other years, but you can manage crop height using PGRs.”

Moving on to talk about his strategy, he explains that 25% of the land is used for growing sugar beet, and rotations can be three, five or seven years, depending on the land and conditions. “We have been building our confidence in the break crop, and next year we might grow more oilseed rape.” Aaron follows a standard programme with a “no fire engines” approach particulary at the start of the season. “We are believers in feeding the crop to keep it healthy to keep chemistry use to a minimum, and we found that the crop kept itself quite clean.”

He tissue tests the crop to check for any nutrient deficiencies. This year plants were low in boron, resulting in top-ups of both boron and manganese and reduced rates of fungicides. Moreover, he was pleased to discover that even in the late, wet harvest of 2019, bushel weight held up, where other varieties may have struggled. “LG Skyscraper is a nice variety to combine and the straw chops well.”

Plans are to grow more of it, and it will be Aaron’s variety of choice for late drilling after sugar beet. “Of course, so far we have only grown it for one year, but we really like this variety.”

 

100 per cent contract farming

Total farm area: 1800 ha

Seed rate: 400 -550 per m2

Rotations:

Seven year: OSR, wheat, sugar beet, spring barley, wheat, winter beans, wheat

Three year: Sugar beet, spring barley, winter wheat

Fertiliser: Liquid

Crop protection: Fungicide applied at T0 and T1 or T1.5

Herbicide Strategy:

Pre emergence: Movon (Flufenacet + flurtamone + diflufenican) Wicket (Prosulfocarb)

Post emergence: Sunfire (flufenacet) Claymore (pendimethalin) where needed

Early spring: Broadway star (pyroxsulam + cloquintocet-mexyl + florasulam) for broome patches

Pulse Crop Genetic Improvement Network (PCGIN)

Limagrain has been involved in PCGIN since its creation and has benefited from the excellent research into the genetic improvement of the pulse crop. The next event is on 14th Nov in Grantham and open for registration now…

Limagrain has been involved in PCGIN since its creation and has benefited from the excellent research into the genetic improvement of the pulse crop. In particular, the work on seed quality has helped in colour retention in large blue and marrowfat pea breeding.

The next event is the PCGIN 2019 stakeholder meeting and will be held on 14th November in Grantham, Lincolnshire.

This industry-led stakeholder meeting will present perspective talks on future market opportunities and relevant international developments, within the context of the latest developments in genetic research on UK pulse crops (PCGIN 2018-2023). There will be time for interactions over lunch.

We are very grateful to Agrii and Limagrain for their sponsorship of this meeting.

Programme

10:30 Arrival, tea & coffee
Welcome & introductions (Peter Smith, Agrii; Will Pillinger, Limagrain)
Chair: Peter Smith, Agrii

11:00 PCGIN: overview & highlights 2019 (Claire Domoney, JIC; Donal O’Sullivan, Reading; Jane Thomas, NIAB)

11:20 Overview of industry-academic exchanges – Marketplace of Ideas (Donal O’Sullivan, Reading)

11:25 The industry perspective, 2019 (12 minutes each speaker)

• Andy Bury, Frontier: Challenges for trading UK pulse crops

• Paul Sheldrake, Healy Group: Rising opportunities for vegetable proteins and UK pulses – Technical & Nutritional Challenges

• Nick Saltmarsh, Hodmedods: Opportunities for existing and novel legume crops in the UK

• Chris Harrison, Novofarina: Food product development and genetic targets in pea.

• The role of Pulses UK

12:45 LUNCH with poster* viewing
Chair: Will Pillinger, Limagrain

13:40 Flash presentations from junior scientists (5 minutes each speaker)

Tom Reynolds, NIAB: Evidence for sexual reproduction of the faba bean pathogen
B. fabae in the UK

Gabriel Robinson, JIC: A nutritional review of UK pulses

Vicky Tagkouli, UoR: Selection schemes for small-scale faba bean breeding
Jake Moscrop, NIAB/UoCam: Enhancing pollination in the field bean, Vicia faba

Ahmed Warsame, UoR: Identifying and quantifying the most important faba bean seed proteins

14:15 Legume crops and international activities (Pete Iannetta, The James
Hutton Institute)

Curation of legume crop germplasm (Noam Chayut, JIC)

14:40 Perspectives & open discussion on priorities (growers, NFU, Defra,
industry & scientists)

15:00 Wrap up & depart

*Poster presentations:

• Genotyping tools for faba bean (Deepti Angra, Reading)

• Towards saturation mutagenesis in faba bean (Tom Harvie, Deepti Angra,
Reading)

• Improved management of viruses (Becky Howard, PGRO; FERA)

• Exploring soybean germplasm (Tony Miller, JIC)

• Nitrate sensors and uptake of nitrate by crops (Tony Miller, JIC)

• Favuleux – developing faba beans as a sustainable source of high-quality
protein for food through optimised genetics, farming and processing (Thomas Wood, NIAB)

• Identification of a QTL conferring partial resistance to downy mildew on faba bean, Vicia faba (Anne Webb, Krystyna Gostkiewicz, Jane Thomas and Thomas Wood, NIAB)

 

Details:

Belton Woods Hotel
Belton,
Grantham,
NG32 2LN

Tel. 020 3027 6614

Thursday, 14th November 2019 (11:00 – 15:00)

https://www.jic.ac.uk/pulse-crop-genetic-improvement-network-pcgin/

https://www.niab.com/pages/id/169/Pulse_Crop_Genetic_Improvement_Network

Importance of specific weight in wheat

In a good year, grain quality is important but in a bad year its even more crucial not just to ensure a market but as an indicator that a variety is truly robust. However, specific weight itself tells us more about the variety than simply the plumpness of the grains.

As a measure of grain quality, specific weight is a standard and well understood trading measure. Whichever end-market grain is being sold into, there is a threshold to meet. Varieties with an inherent higher level give more security in meeting that requirement. However specific weight itself tells us more about the variety than simply the plumpness of the grains. Varieties with a higher specific weight generally tend to be the more consistent, especially in difficult situations and in years of prolonged or repeated stress.

JB Diego gained a strong following based not only on yield potential, but also on consistency, and physical grain quality was a strong determinant in that. LG Spotlight is another example that offers very high yields coupled with superb grain quality, a very high specific weight and excellent Hagberg/resistance to sprouting. Traditionally, soft wheats have tended to have slightly lower specific weight than the best hard wheats, mainly due to more strict requirements for bread wheat. However, there is no physical or genetic reason why soft wheats cannot have high specific weights well into the 80’s.

As the wheat plant develops, ear number and potential grain number are set, then post flowering the grains fill and therefore grain size becomes a major determinant of final yield. However, when grain fill is disrupted due to low light, high temperature or other stresses, the grains will not achieve their full potential. Often this results in grain being less plump with the smallest grains at the top of each spikelet either being lost over the back of the combine or taken out post-harvest as screenings during processing. As a grain develops, the length is set first and then it fills outwards to determine the width and final size. If this process is interrupted then grains will be thinner than normal, often with a more pronounced crease and in extreme cases grains can become “boat shaped”. All of this reduces the packing density of the sample and hence reduces the specific weight. Varieties like LG Spotlight and JB Diego will give the most consistent sample and reliable yields, because they can produce an optimal number of grains of the right size range that can be filled consistently, under an array of conditions.

Ed Flatman, Senior Wheat Breeder for Limagrain

Grain size will vary as a function of available resources; more optimal conditions of high light intensity, temperature in the mid 20’s and adequate moisture supply – will lead to the highest yields and increased grain size. However, when any of these factors are compromised, these varieties will produce slighter smaller but still well-filled grains, whereas in other varieties grains can be less well shaped or become pinched and this easily knocks points off the specific weight. High Hagberg and very good resistance to sprouting also ensure bushel weights are maintained, especially in catchy harvests. Here, the alternate wet and dry can cause grains to swell and then contract, even if there is only a hint of pre-germination, then this affects grain shape and hence specific weight. Ear disease, such as fusarium, causes infected grains to be pinched or shrivelled, having the same negative effect on the sample quality.

Seed products offer soil benefits

Improved soil structure, weed control and more efficient fertiliser use, are all benefits to be gained by growing a cover crop.

You can take full benefit of an ‘added value’ cover crop after cereal or maize harvest, which will maximise your soils’ potential. Soil is one of your most valued natural resources, so it’s important to make good cropping choices that will help improve its properties.

There are many species of cover crop to choose from. Oilseed radishes (such as Edwin) have beet cyst nematode (BCN) resistance, as well as a very deep rooting system that will help compacted soils. White mustard is another useful cover crop; it is fast growing and if sown early, has bags of biomass. Varieties such as Vitaro are a non-host to both potato cyst nematode and cereal cyst nematodes.

Mixtures are also useful, especially if you are on EFA land. Sprinter is a mixture of black oat silke, and vetch. It is ideal for later sowing and acts as a good weed suppressant. The vetch is a legume species, so will produce free Nitrogen too. Lift N Fix also contains vetch, along with winter forage rye variety; Humbolt. This mixture is a highly effective Nitrogen lifter and can be grazed in early spring after the EFA period.