Buy a subscription

Home Contact Sitemap login Checkout

Farming Smarter

Farming Smarter
  • Home
  • Who We Are
    • Who We Are
    • Staff Directory
    • Board of Directors
    • Contact Us
  • What We Do
    • What We Do
    • Agronomy Research
    • Commercial Innovation
    • Field Tested
    • Knowledge & Network
  • What We Offer
    • What We Offer
    • Sponsorship Packages
    • Events
    • Research Projects
      • Research Projects
      • Agronomy Research Projects
      • Field Tested Projects
      • Commercial Innovation Projects
    • Subscriptions
      • Subscriptions
      • FS Agronomy Subscription
      • FS Digital Subscription
    • Smart Partner Program
    • Speakers
  • Get Involved
    • Get Involved
    • Jobs
    • Sponsorship
    • I want to help!
    • With On-farm Research
    • With Product Testing
    • With Small Plot Research
    • Internship Opportunities
    • Volunteer!
    • Support Research!
  • Learning Resources
    • Learning Resources
    • Conservation Agronomy
    • Magazine
    • Online Classroom (CEU)
    • News Articles
    • Videos
    • Publications & Reports
      • Publications & Reports
      • Published Papers
      • Research Reports
    • Podcasts
    • 360 Videos
Print This Page

Covering the Cover Crops

Friday, November 5, 2021

Our Cover Crops project is finishing its fourth year, the final of our scheduled timeline.

As winter looms ever closer, it's a good time to think about our soil health come spring. The biggest advantage of cover crops is the benefits they bring to soil nutrients & the general health of the soil.

For example, we saw that planting lentils after canola will lead to nitrogen levels being reintroduced to the soil.

Cover crops can take a lot of work to establish, and sometimes it isn't economically efficient if you're just letting it die come spring. While the breakdown of that organic matter in the spring, the cost can add up and quickly become too much.

Benefits of Cover Crops

Paying for something you won't see returns on doesn't always feel good. However, sometimes the returns aren't obvious to see. Even though some can't be harvested & their yield sold, they increase the quality of your yield in the next season.

Over winter, the crops will go dormant. They'll provide ground cover, retaining moisture over winter, as well as aid in recovering nitrogen and other minerals. Along with the increased soil health, cover crops will combat soil erosion come spring.

Most times, farmers are faced with two choices after planting cover crops: leave it and get a crop out of it or go back and terminate it when it grows.

By letting it grow, you're able to profit off the crop and make some of the money back. Crops like rye are perfect for this. Inexpensive and promotes healthy soil structure in spring, and harvestable.

On the other side of the leaf, by terminating the crop or leaving it to die off will leave you with improved organic matter in the spring. This matter will break down and add minerals back into the soil, improving its quality.

Cover Crop Resources

Check out some of these handy resources on cover crops!

University of Manitoba's Dr. Yvonne Lawley talks about the goals of this project

Yvonne Lawley shares the results of cover crops in Manitoba

Cover Crops Across Prairie Canada

Farming Smarter

211034 Hwy 512, Lethbridge County, AB
T1J 5N9 Canada

Quick Links

Who We Are

What We Do

What We Offer

Get Involved

Learning Resources

More

Staff Directory

Contact

Copyright © Farming Smarter 2023. All rights reserved | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions