De-risking early sown crops
Term
2023-2025
Project Officer
Jane McInnes
WHY THIS PROJECT IS NEEDED
Dry and early sowing of cereal crops is a practice commonly used by farmers in southern Australia to combat erratic and late opening season rainfall, and to effectively manage the sowing program on increasingly large farms.
In short: This is a collaborative project which aims to enhance the adoption of strategic dry sowing crop management techniques to help farmers reduce their production risk and better manage increasingly large sowing programs.
There has been a large amount of research and development on dry and early sowing by key research and development organisations such as Grains Research Development Corporation (GRDC), CSIRO, and state agencies into seeding strategies, nutritional requirements, and machinery setup for dry sown crops.
However, many growers have not accessed the information, or are seeking to develop a more strategic approach that is tailored to their specific district and property requirements. Additionally, there are opportunities to increase the success of early sowing by combining management approaches and strategies.
Project focus
This project will see fifteen prominent Grower Groups partner with four Drought Hubs to deliver a program that accelerates the adoption of strategic dry and early sown crop management approaches. Each group will tailor activities to meet the knowledge, experience, and needs of their member bases and local communities.
In the Riverine Plains region, the project includes the establishment of two demonstration sites investigating best bet early sown crop management at Murchison in Northern Victoria, and Rand in southern NSW.
Agronomic parameters collected from both sites will also compare the “best bet” option with the current practice.
Project full title: De-risking the seeding program: Adoption of key management practices for the success of dry early sown crops
Further reading
Find out more
For further information about this project, please contact Riverine Plains Senior Project Manager, Jane McInnes at jane@riverineplains.org.au
Project investment
This project is supported by Ag Excellence Alliance Inc, through funding from the Australian Government’s Future Drought Fund.
Partners
This project is led by Ag Excellence Alliance and involves Consortium Groups and organisations from across the grain production regions in South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and Western Australia.
This includes: Ag Excellence Alliance, Agriculture Innovation and Research Eyre Peninsula, Upper North Farming Systems, Northern Sustainable Soils, Murray Plains Farmers, Hart Field Site Group, Mallee Sustainable Farming, Birchip Cropping Group, Farmlink, Riverine Plains, Southern Growers, Central West Farming Systems, Irrigation Farmers Network, Facey Group, Corrigin Farm Improvement Group, South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI), South Australian Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub, Victorian Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub, Southern NSW Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub and Southwest WA Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub.
Focus areas
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