@agronomistag@danrejto What are your feelings on soil health more specifically increasing OM through min tillage and utilizing high biomass cover crops? Long term beneficial or overblown goal, I’ve seen your paper on single species high biomass being more beneficial than multi species. Curious about
@agronomistag@danrejto Do you think regenerative farming is over hyped and we should be utilizing fertilizers and tillage to maximize production? Or somewhere in the middle reasonable fertility with minimum tillage is “least harmful” but still not a climate change solution?
Because of Stacey, we as Bulls fans know “it’s a simple game.”
Because of Stacey, we always have hot sauce ready.
Because of Stacey, we like our meatballs spicy.
Because of Stacey - and the joy he brought - this goodbye hits so hard.
Drive home safely, Stacey. Beep Beep.
@farmerdoug93@FarmrHuntr Have you been able to cut your herbicide substantially? I’ve been planting green the last few years and haven’t reduced my herbicide. Would like to roller crimp and reduce herbicide but haven’t had the chance/confidence to try.
@TZimmermanfarms Have you see consistent yield responses from biological tests? I see a lot of excitement about it but haven’t seen many results around it?
•The U.S. Senate may hold a floor vote TODAY which would overturn a 20-year moratorium on sulfide-ore copper mining on 225,000 acres of Superior National Forest land in the watershed of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area (BWCA) Wilderness in northern Minnesota. The Boundary Waters is the most visited Wilderness in the United States.
🛶 Enjoying the Minnesotan/Canadian wilderness by canoe or other lesser watercraft is one of our nations greatest available pastimes, and one I have personally enjoyed my entire life. We must protect these public lands from the rapacious capitalists threatening to turn them into a poisoned wasteland.
•This vote in Congress would open the door to copper mining at the headwaters of this entire ecosystem. This kind of mining produces toxic pollution, including acid runoff and heavy metals, that can contaminate nearby waters.
•The Boundary Waters supports a major outdoor economy that sustains thousands of jobs and generates over a billion dollars a year - built on clean water and intact public lands. But this vote would clear the way for toxic mining that puts all of that at risk. It would also set a dangerous precedent, making it easier to roll back protections for public lands across the country, including wilderness areas, national monuments, and national parks.
•This is a defining moment. If you care about clean water, public lands, and protecting places we can’t replace, now is the time to speak up.
•Protect the Boundary Waters, and vote NO on House Joint Resolution 140. Let’s save this treasured place for all of us—forever. https://t.co/JhNAR6Za2O