Handling Untilled Fields Of Cornstalks
URBANA, ILL.
Late planting, cool summer temperatures,
and a wet October caused the 2009 harvest
to go down in history as one of the latest on
record. As a result, many fields were not tilled
last fall.
Emerson Nafziger, University of Illinois Extension
agronomist, said this will cause challenges
this spring.
“Much of the corn was planted into wet soils
last year, creating a considerable amount of
compaction,” he said. “Because many farmers
couldn’t till in the fall, much of this compaction
remains. In addition, many fields had ruts cut
into them during harvest. Finally, a large number
of cornstalks remain in the field, insulating
the soil and slowing rates of drying.”
Typically, compaction can be relieved some by
natural causes. Each freeze-thaw cycle decreases
compaction a small amount. Surface
soils experience numerous cycles of freezing
and thawing, but at depths of 6 inches or more,
there are few freeze-thaw cycles. Nafziger said
farmers cannot expect much relief of deeper
compaction from natural causes this year.
“We simply need to live with most of the compaction
and hope we can do a good job of deep
tillage next fall to relieve it,” he said.
With no crop present to remove water through
roots, low soil temperatures, and large amounts
of cornstalks present, the soil is unlikely to dry
enough to allow tilling to the depth farmers normally
perform primary tillage.
Nafziger said, “Without an early period of
warm, dry weather in 2010, it remains unlikely
soils will be dry enough to allow effective tillage
before planting starts. Soils don’t dry rapidly
until soil temperatures are in the 50s and 60s,
usually in April or even May.”
In the meantime, it will be helpful to find ways
to disturb the soil surface and to cut and move,
and perhaps bury, some of the residue. This will
help dry the surface soils to allow earlier and
more uniform planting.
“Chisel plows are unlikely to work, and field
cultivators will probably not get through standing
cornstalks,” he said. “Lighter disk harrows
might work better than most alternatives to perform
shallow tillage of cornstalks. Disk-rippers
might be adjustable enough to work, but implement
weight should be as light as possible to
avoid causing more compaction.”
Some believe spring disking is the reason for
disastrous compaction. But Nafziger argues
that heavy equipment causes this compaction,
not the shallowness or pattern of secondary
tillage. The only real “blame” a relatively light
tillage implement earns is by being run shallow,
making the break between the tilled and untilled
soil easy to find, he said.
Vertical tillage may be possible as these shallow-
tillage implements are typically run at high
speeds (often about 10 mph). They consist of
rolling blades that chop stalks and cut into the
soil, ripple or wavy coulters, rolling spikes of
some sort, and in some cases leveling boards or
blades. They do not produce a distinct break between
tilled and untilled soil like the disk or field
cultivator.
“If the surface is dry and relatively level, these
implements do a good job of breaking residue
and improving seedbed conditions,” he said. “If
it’s not dry or if there are ruts, these implements
might not work well.
If strip tillage is performed, Nafziger believes it
may be best to remove the knives and use this
implement to clear some residue off the rows
and do light tillage, leaving small berms. He
cautions farmers from placing anhydrous ammonia
into wet soils during a spring strip-till operation,
as it will stay concentrated
and may well move back toward the roots if
the soil dries out.
Tillage may be necessary to handle cornstalks
and ruts.
The rate of microbial breakdown in cornstalks
will be slow until soil temperatures are back in
the 60s and 70s, Nafziger said. The late maturity
and cool temperatures after last fall’s harvest
meant little stalk breakdown. He said it
may be necessary to till to get stalks under control
to allow planting and use trash-movers during
planting.
To make a good seedbed to plant into, farmers
must find a way to fill in ruts completely without
leaving pockets that interfere with seeding
uniformity. In the majority of cases, tillage
might be needed to do an adequate job of filling
ruts.
Soybeans may be a better option than corn in
untilled fields of cornstalks, Nafizger said.
“It’s easier to establish an adequate stand of
soybeans with little or no tillage of cornstalks
than it is to establish a good corn stand,” he
said. “Soybeans suffer less yield loss with planting
delays than corn. Some farmers may choose
to line up seed of both crops just in case and
switch to soybean if the spring starts to resemble
2009.” Δ