Zone tillage is the indirect loosening
of an area of soil between two coulter blades which are stagger mounted
on either side of a planter row. The following are some key points to keep
in mind when planning for a zone tillage setup.
Coulter tillage is the direct
loosening of soil by a coulter blade. This can be accomplished using a
single coulter or the combination of several coulters. The coulters should
be able to accommodate a variety of blade styles to match changing soil
types and soil conditions. The following are some key points to keep in
mind when planning for a coulter tillage setup:
In most cases, it is recommended
that fertilizer be applied at a localized point slightly below and to
the side of the seed placement area. Misplaced fertilizer could prove
less effective or result in germination failure. The following are some
key points to remember when applying fertilizer in the previously discussed
applications:
| Problem |
Possible
Cause in Zone Tillage |
Possible
Remedy |
| seed
trench not closing |
insufficient
soil loosening |
move
coulters close together and ensure that in operation the planter is
level |
| poor
soil to seed contact |
soil
is being loosened below the seed |
move
the coulters farther apart, use less aggressive blades |
| excessive
residue loss |
aggressive
coulter blades are burying residue |
use
narrow profile coulter blades |
| hairpinning
of residue in the seed trench |
residue
is not being cleared |
use
a residue clearing device to move residue without engaging the soil |
| planter
skipping, seed spacing, drive wheels lifting off the ground |
planter
lacks ballast to keep the coulters in the soil |
add
ballast to the planter |
| Problem |
Possible
Cause in Coulter Tillage |
Possible
Remedy |
| poor
seed to soil contact |
coulter
mounted ahead of the planter row unit is running too deep |
set
coulter 3/8" shallower than planting depth |
| uneven
planting depth and seed placement |
excessive
soil disturbance leaving rough, uneven path for row unit gauge wheels
to follow causing row unit bounce |
use less
aggressive coulter blades or use planter unit mounted row cleaners
to level the soil surface |
| coulter
mounted ahead of the row unit is running at inconsistent depths |
use a planter
unit mounted coulter that will maintain a consistent depth relationship
to that of the row unit |
| weeds
emerging in seedbed area |
excessive
tillage bringing weed seed to the surface where it can germinate |
use
less aggressive coulter blades or switch to a zone till system |
| poor
seed germination |
seed
which is located too close to like residue may become subject to alleopathic
poisoning (ex. corn following corn) |
use
a residue clearing device which moves residue instead of incorporating
it into the soil |
| erratic
fertilizer placement |
injectors
applying fertilizer in a band or on top of the soil |
use
a deep placement coulter equipped with a knife for pinpoint fertilizer
placement |
| overly
aggressive blades are tilling the soil instead of opening a slot for
fertilizer placement |
use narrow
profile blades to open a clean narrow slot |
| poor
seed emergence on a dry year |
excessive
tillage causing additional moisture loss in the intended seedbed |
use
less aggressive coulter blades or switch to a zone till system |
| planter
skipping, drive wheels lifting off the ground |
planter
lacks ballast to keep the coulters in the soil |
add ballast
to the planter |
| uneven
seed spacing and depth |
excessive
residue in the seed trench |
use
a residue clearing device which moves residue instead of incorporating
it into the soil |