Wallaces Farmer

Reduced leaching results in higher yields and protein levels

Warren and Meredith Craft, who farm near Stanley, N.D., found success using a nitrogen management aid.

April 1, 2017

3 Min Read

In northwestern North Dakota, near the city of Stanley, Warren and Meredith Craft farm over 5,000 acres.  Their crops for the upcoming season include spring wheat, field peas, soybeans and flax. Because their biggest crop is wheat, it’s important to have good yield and high protein levels at harvest. Protein is the key when they haul in to the elevator.  “They’ll discount you eight to 10 cents a bushel if you don’t make the 14 percent protein level,” Warren says.

Last year the Crafts used a nitrogen management aid, NZONE on most of their wheat acres to prevent leaching and keep the nitrogen in the root zone where it’s readily available. It worked and produced a five to six bushel better yield and the protein was well over 14 percent.  “In prior years, we’d had trouble getting to 13 or 13.5” Warren says “so we were really happy with that.”  “The protein was what really made the difference,” Meredith says.  Thanks to the increased yield and improved protein levels, the Crafts say their return on investment was excellent.

Maturity Levels Affected
Meredith says an experience on a test plot provided them with even more proof of NZONE’s performance.  “Warren was in his combine and I was in mine,” she says, “and I just happened to be on the side that didn’t have NZONE and he was on the side that did have NZONE. It was getting towards night and I was starting to have plugging problems where the grain was basically acting like it was too wet to be combining. And I’d look over at Warren and he’d be going strong, and I’d be stopping, struggling, and the grain cart would be waiting for me.”

“So, I got on the two-way and asked him what he was doing over there and he said nothing, it was cutting good.  He asked me what I was doing because I wasn’t doing much! When he finished his section, he came over onto my half, which had no NZONE and he knew exactly what I was talking about. Basically, his portion, where we had used NZONE, it matured better so he could cut it, and mine, without NZONE, hadn’t matured and it wasn’t cuttable.” 

The Crafts will be using NZONE on their wheat and flax this year, as well as much of their soybeans.  “They’re saying on soybeans we could put down 30 pounds of nitrogen,” Warren says. “So wherever we’re using anhydrous we’ll be using NZONE.“

Nutrients Also Provide Value
The Crafts use nutrient blends from AgXplore as well. They worked with their rep Jen Posey to select the right products for their acres, including NUTRIPAK on seed. When they’re spraying, they mix in a quart of SulPak with the herbicide.  We felt it made for a greener and lusher wheat crop,” Warren says. “It also helps with yield and the protein.”  The Crafts also used AgXplore’s ValuPak and BorPak products on field peas and saw significant yield increase over areas where it wasn’t used.

Last season brought hail to an area of the Craft’s farm that affected about 400 acres of peas along with a neighbor’s adjacent acres. Jen advised them to spray ValuPak and BorPak immediately.  “That saved about half of it,” Warren says. “Our neighbor didn’t get anything and we combined 25 to 26 bushels.”

The Crafts brought Jen out to the affected field before harvest. Jen couldn’t believe it was the same field that had been hailed out.  “She asked, ‘well, why are we driving through the middle of it?’” Warren says. “And I told her, ‘because it’s easier than trying to walk through it—the growth is that thick.’”

Learn more about AgXplore’s products at agxplore.com.

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