30 dirty years
Well-Known Member
Anybody into organic farming I got five acres of farmable wetlands that have not been fertilized or anything in the city that needs a use.
Anybody into organic farming I got five acres of farmable wetlands that have not been fertilized or anything in the city that needs a use.
Anybody into organic farming I got five acres of farmable wetlands that have not been fertilized or anything in the city that needs a use.
Anybody into organic farming I got five acres of farmable wetlands that have not been fertilized or anything in the city that needs a use.
Quick question KMB83... would this fit into the "organic" category?to answer your question: yes
corn is a grass, grass weeds are the most competitive to a corn crop. Roundup is your best bet for controlling grass weed species.
systemic, works fast, plant RR resistant corn and you can continue to use it for control.
From a personal stand point... that is... in my opinion, I think it would be an almost impossible task to keep this in the "organic" category.OCR,
all jokes aside, starting into a set-aside piece of property without ALL the managements tools known to man, makes the hill that much steeper.
I would agree... but if there was any chemical use at all... even Roundup... which you can basically drink (I wouldn't)... it might disqualify your ground for future use as "organic"... but if and for how long, I wouldn't know...i'd think about doing something to get the weeds under control and then lets worry about organic.