New research has shown just how deep canola roots will travel in their search for moisture late in the season. Trials have shown that there are significant yield advantages from early sown canbola that experiences a dry finish. But there are trade offs. In this podcast CSIRO’s John Kirkegaard reveals just how low canola roots go and the benefits that can be derived from early sown canola. Contact: John Kirkegaard CSIRO John.kirkegaard@csiro.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm...
Apr 01, 2020•11 min•Ep. 140
A grain grower survey conducted across 25 farm businesses in Western Australia’s northern agricultural region found the majority considered their cereal crop yields were being adversely affected by the inefficient use of micronutrients. In this podcast, grower Dylan Hirsch, based at Latham in WA, talks us through this survey and the broader GRDC investment behind it. The investment is a two-year project that aims to identify the requirements for, and benefits of, micronutrient foliar application...
Apr 01, 2020•7 min•Ep. 141
Controlled Traffic Farming is in simple terms driving your heavy vehicles on the same wheel tracks every time you’re in the paddock. In Australia’s southeastern grain growing region Controlled Traffic Farming has been widely adopted in high and medium rainfall zones but not so much in low rainfall zones. With investment from the GRDC a research project was undertaken to find out why this farming system was not being adopted in Low Rainfall Zones and if there are benefits in doing so - and there ...
Mar 25, 2020•14 min•Ep. 138
The GRDC has invested in a two-year project that aims to identify the requirements for, and benefits of, micronutrient foliar application in medium-to-low rainfall areas of WA’s Northern Agricultural Region. The research project is led by Western Australian grain grower group, the Liebe Group, in partnership with Murdoch University. Murdoch University’s Professor Richard Bell talks us though the research and what it means for growers. Contact: Richard Bell R.Bell@murdoch.edu.au Resources: Managi...
Mar 25, 2020•9 min•Ep. 139
Ironstone gravels are important cropping soils and a better understanding about the mineralogy and physical characteristics of these soils, especially their soil moisture holding capacity and high rates of phosphorus ‘fixation’ is urgently required. So the GRDC has invested in new research, led by the University of Western Australia, to study and understand these soils to help growers maximise crop productivity from these soils. Contact: Dr Matthias Leopold The University of Western Australia Sc...
Mar 18, 2020•11 min•Ep. 136
Fall Armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda was detected in Australia for the first time in January 2020 and a warning was issued to grain growers to inspect crops for signs of the pest’s presence. The larval stage of the moth is similar in appearance to many caterpillars already present in agricultural and horticultural crops and can cause severe economical damage, even total crop destruction. At the 2020 Grains Research Update at Goondiwindi principle entomologist with Queensland’s Department of Agri...
Mar 18, 2020•15 min•Ep. 137
A new research project in the Southern Region will take the principles of Precision Agriculture and apply them to addressing sub-soil constraints. Simply put, this innovative approach will identify the location of poorly performing soil, potentially reducing the areas within a paddock that need soil amelioration work to be done. Professor Roger Armstrong from Agriculture Victoria explains more on this podcast. Contact: Roger Armstrong Roger.armstrong@agriculture.vic.gov.au Learn more about your ...
Mar 11, 2020•13 min•Ep. 134
GRDC’s investment in faba bean breeding has contributed to the delivery of new and improved Faba bean varieties to grain growers. In Western Australia’s Esperance Port Zone the high rainfall makes Faba beans a suitable legume to include in crop rotations and WA’s Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development senior research scientist Mark Seymour has been working with growers to make the most of the benefits a pulse in the rotation can bring to cropping systems. Contact: Mark Seymour...
Mar 11, 2020•8 min•Ep. 135
Farmers and their advisers, naturally, are mostly focused on growing better grain – finding those incremental improvements that can often mean so much to the bottom line of farming businesses. But there are people also working at the other end of the grain trail – a long way from the farm – focused on improving market access and even developing new and innovative grain products to make Australian grain more valuable to customers. One such story is the work being undertaken by AEGIC – the Austral...
Mar 04, 2020•10 min•Ep. 132
Esperance Port Zone grain grower Neil Wandel has been including faba beans in his crop rotations for 4 decades. While they might not be the highest value legume he could grow, the range of benefits faba beans bring to his paddocks make them a favourite rotation crop. Contact: Mark Seymour, Senior Research Officer Grain Crop Agronomy Department of Agriculture and Food, Western Australia PMB 50 | Esperance WA 6450 t: + 61 (0)8 9083 1143 | f: + 61 (0)8 9083 11002 | m: + 61 (0)428 925 002 Useful Res...
Mar 04, 2020•8 min•Ep. 133
The complexity of agriculture would lead some people to label farming as a form of art. Working with the climate, the landscape, the machinery, the crops, the business … the list goes on. Somehow synthesising all the elements that go into making a modern farm and coming out the other end with a profitable enterprise. And doing it year after year. It’s no wonder farmers need to be resilient. In Part 2 we look at what it means to be a resilient farmer out in the paddock. The depth of planning that...
Feb 26, 2020•14 min•Ep. 130
The complexity of agriculture would lead some people to label farming as a form of art. Working with the climate, the landscape, the machinery, the crops, the business … the list goes on. Somehow synthesising all the elements that go into making a modern farm and coming out the other end with a profitable enterprise. And doing it year after year. It’s no wonder farmers need to be resilient. In the first of two parts agricultural consultant, Chris Minehan, talks about having a resilient business ...
Feb 26, 2020•11 min•Ep. 131
Trials undertaken on the Riverine Plains testing early sowing times for both spring and winter wheat varieties have produced some interesting results, particularly around moisture requirements at sowing. At the other end of the season, it’s all about avoiding the frost window during flowering and also spreading out flowering dates. On this podcast FAR Australia researcher Michael Straight talks about the trials which compared the performance of common winter and spring varieties grown on the Riv...
Feb 19, 2020•13 min•Ep. 128
A key research question that has an appreciable bearing on our future management of this pest relates to the way in which resistance has evolved in the Redlegged Earth Mite. Has resistance in RLEM evolved time and time again at a local scale, or has one mutation spread widely to confer resistance to mites in other regions? In this podcast Professor Ary Hoffman from the University of Melbourne reveals DNA technology has enabled researchers to make great advances in understanding the Redlegged Ear...
Feb 19, 2020•16 min•Ep. 129
At a meeting of the Esperance Port Zone, Regional Cropping Solutions Network, mid way through 2019 a decision was made to help grain growers better understand weather forecasts and rain deciles. What was wanted was advice on how to interpret this vital information so better on-farm crop management decisions could be made. For this GRDC podcast Debra Bishop went to the Bureau of Meteorology head office in Western Australia and spoke with the Bureau’s Media and Communications Manager Neil Bennett....
Feb 12, 2020•21 min•Ep. 127
GRDC’s Pulsecheck program aims to introduce growers who are new to growing pulses to all the challenges and rewards to be had by diversifying into these increasingly popular grains. So, what’s Pulsecheck all about? This podcast we hope will convince you to check your pulses. Contact: Jason Brand 0409 357 076 Jason.brand@ecodev.vic.gov.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
Feb 05, 2020•11 min•Ep. 125
Oats has a wonderful reputation amongst consumers, especially those in Asia, as a very healthy product. So it makes sense to find more ways to present oats to those consumers. And that is exactly what the Australian Export Grains Innovation Centre is doing developing new products such as oat-based rice and oat-based noodles. On this podcast we speak to one of the very enthusiastic people behind this research that is adding extra value to the humble oat. Contact: Mark Tucek 08 6168 9900 https://w...
Feb 05, 2020•10 min•Ep. 126
Field Peas can be problematic for WA growers to grow, but a simple management practice could change that. Dr Sarita Bennet from the Centre for Crop and Disease Management in WA has trialled using cereal stubble as a form of trellis for the field pea plants to climb. While broadacre trials are needed, Dr Bennett says the early results are positive. Contact: Sarita Bennet 08 9266 2740 sarita.bennett@curtin.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
Jan 29, 2020•9 min•Ep. 123
Just how quickly, as farmers, we can change the nature of weeds is perfectly spotlighted by how quickly barley grass and brome grass have reacted to our attempts to control them in cropping paddocks. On this podcast Associate Professor Gurjeet Gill explains how these grasses have learned to adapt to control methods and are now lasting longer in the seedbank than they were just 20 years ago. Contact: Associate Professor Gurjeet Gill 08 8313 7744 Gurjeet.gill@adelaide.edu.au Learn more about your ...
Jan 29, 2020•10 min•Ep. 124
Western Australia’s Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development senior researcher Mark Seymour and Esperance Port Zone grain grower Ron Longbottom feature in this podcast about Lentils. In WA growers have been cautious about including this pulse in their cropping program because of variable yields and harvesting challenges. However new lentil varieties and modern harvester fronts have made the lentil a more viable option in cropping systems. Mark Seymour Senior Research Officer Gra...
Jan 22, 2020•7 min•Ep. 121
Barley grass in the southern cropping region is becoming more prominent as a problem weed for croppers – as herbicide resistance emerges and as the plant evolves develops new behaviours. A region wide series of trials is taking place, including work being carried out at Birchip in western Victoria by the Birchip Cropping Group, with the overall project being overseen by weed and cropping specialist, Associate Professor Gurjeet Gill from the University of Adelaide. Contact Claire Browne 03 5492 2...
Jan 22, 2020•11 min•Ep. 122
And you thought you were responsible for that amazing wheat crop. Think again. There are people in back offices all over Australia who know the seed you sow, infinitely better that you could hope. These are the people of SAGI – Statistics for the Australian Grains Industry. The name does not even hint what SAGI does. Take a listen and find out about the best friends you will ever have in the grains industry. Contact: Dr Julian Taylor 08 8313 2077 Julian.taylor@adelaide.edu.au Learn more about yo...
Jan 15, 2020•10 min•Ep. 119
How do you take soil samples from your paddocks? A leading soil scientist maintains that many farmers are leaving a lot of valuable information buried in the paddock, which could be easily accessed with a slightly different approach to sampling. On this podcast, Jason Codon invites you to look at soil sampling with soil variability in mind. Contact: Jason Codon 02 6933 2278 jcondon@csu.edu.au Link https://grdc.com.au/resources-and-publications/grdc-update-papers/tab-content/grdc-update-papers/20...
Jan 15, 2020•10 min•Ep. 120
They may be tiny but the damage they can potentially do is far from small. Root Lesion Nematodes are well known as a problem, but there is still much to learn about them and their impact on crops. A new investment by GRDC aims to fill in some knowledge gaps in parts of WA and develop further options for growers seeking to better control the nematodes if they are proving a problem in individual paddocks. Contact: Blake O’Meagher 0499 166 160 Blake@farmanco.com.au Learn more about your ad choices....
Jan 08, 2020•8 min•Ep. 118
Trials in Western Australia are showing how well canola can out compete ryegrass if some simple management changes are made. At a trial site in Kojunup, that was blanketed in ryegrass plants, adjusting seeding rates, seed size and row spacing had a dramatic impact on ryegrass plant numbers. Contact: Mike Ashworth 08 6488 7872 Mike.ashworth@uwa.edu.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
Dec 31, 2019•12 min•Ep. 117
Growers with acid soils know full well the risks involved in growing pulses. While new acid tolerant rhizobia are on the way, this podcast focusses on giving you an insider’s view on getting the best performance from your pulses growing in acidic soil. Contact: Ross Ballard 08 8303 9388 Ross.ballard@sa.gov.au Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dec 24, 2019•9 min•Ep. 116
Crop competition is one of the key pathways to controlling unwanted weeds in your paddocks. On this podcast we look at one trial in Western Australia that is testing crop competition against prolific ryegrass populations, proving that out-competing weeds really works. The trial is also looking at the pre-emergent herbicide degradation, particularly in dry times. AHRI’s Mike Ashworth provides some food for thought. Contact: Mike Ashworth 08 6488 7872 Mike.ashworth@uwa.edu.au More Information: htt...
Dec 18, 2019•11 min•Ep. 113
A leading soil scientist has argued for a more strategic approach to nitrogen application. One way of doing that is by increasing soil carbon levels. But the CSIRO’s Jeff Baldock goes one step further and argues that putting a value on soil organic carbon would encourage farmers to grow more legumes. Contact: Jeff Baldock 08 8303 8537 Jeff.baldock@csiro.au More Information: https://grdc.com.au/resources-and-publications/grdc-update-papers/tab-content/grdc-update-papers/2019/02/nitrogen-and-soil-...
Dec 18, 2019•9 min•Ep. 115
How economically viable is incorporating organic matters into your sub-soil? That’s what new research funded by GRDC is trying to ascertain. While it’s been long understood that some sub-soils constrain root growth, just how that could be feasibly addressed has been sticking point. On this podcast Dr Roger Armstrong from Agriculture Victoria discusses ways sub-soil constraints may be overcome. Contact: Roger Armstrong 0417 500 449 roger.armstrong@dpi.vic.gov.au Other Resources: https://grdc.com....
Dec 11, 2019•14 min•Ep. 110
Nick Gillett from the WA’s eastern wheat belt has been making use of carbonate rich soils from his own farm to correct the pH of his farm’s acidic soils, rather than truck-in coastal. An option that saves freight costs, which can then be put towards spreading more of his farm sourced lime over more hectares to improve his soils and crop yields. GRDC project code: LIE1803-002SAX Further Information: Greg Shea, DPIRD 0427 449 398 greg.shea@dpird.wa.gov.au Useful Resources: https://grdc.com.au/reso...
Dec 11, 2019•8 min•Ep. 111