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26 May 2021

Award-winning Lincolnshire recipe helps to overcome OSR challenges

As featured in Arable Farming Magazine

Award-winning Lincolnshire recipe helps to overcome OSR challenges

by Arable Farming

One growers efforts to tackle the challenges of oilseed rape production have paved the way to double YEN success. Arable Farming finds out more.

Last season was the first time Lincolnshire grower Mark Stubbs had any oilseed rape fail since his family partnership re-introduced it 10 years ago.

But this certainly has not deterred the double Oilseeds YEN award-winner from growing the crop.

Nor in continuing to reject either early drilling or pulling back from every other year growing with wheat at Marshchapel on the coast or a one-in three rotation with wheat followed by spring barley or oats on the Wolds at Calcethorpe.

Mr Stubbs says: Our establishment recipe saw last years Marshchapel crop through alarming levels of flea beetle.

But harvesting delays meant we sowed later and into poorer conditions than we like.

Then it was overwhelmed by a combination of intense slug pressure and winter flooding on the heavy ground.

We went out of OSR 20 years ago because our original plough-based regime wasnt performing. But almost every year since weve come back into the crop with hybrids and single pass seeding, weve averaged 4.5 tonnes per hectare or more across our farms. And despite some early flea beetle damage, we took the bronze YEN award with 6.77t/ ha from our DK Exclaim entry in 2019, going one better last season with V316OL averaging 6.71t/ha for the silver. A. and C.

Stubbs and Sons has 50ha of DK Exclaim and 160ha of HOLL mainly the latest variety, V367OL in the ground.

With fewer early pest or establishment pressures, the 2021 crops are looking promising, boding well for overall farm performance.

We deliberately chose hybrids for our return to OSR, starting with Excalibur and now DK Exclaim, together with high value HOLL-growing, says Mr Stubbs. Were not fans of PGRs, so we dont want our crops overgrowthy ahead of winter. After the Proline they get with their AstroKerb in late-November we dont spray them again until mid-flowering. So, good light leaf spot resistance and stem strength are vital. We also really value pod shatter resistance, which allows us to hold off on combining for the highest yields without added risk.

Flea beetle Keen not to have their OSR too forward too early, August 12 is the earliest date Mr Stubbs is prepared to sow.

He aims to finish before the final week of the month to get the crops established ahead of the early September peak of flea beetle migration.

Taking care to preserve soil moisture and maximise seed-to-soil contact in establish ment, the business is never afraid to drill when the soil surface is dry either, providing rain is forecast.

That way they know the crop is ready to go as soon as theres enough moisture for germination.

Their successful main defence against cabbage stem flea beetle (CSFB) is crops that come through evenly and all at once, growing away rapidly to establish themselves strongly below ground more than above it.

This is really helped by their success in building soil structure and health over the past 10 years.

The least possible tillage in the rotation, winter covers ahead of spring cropping and regular organic manuring, has seen soil organic matters climb from about 2% to more than 6%.

We bale all our straw because we dont want it interfering with establishment or providing shelter for the slugs, says Mr Stubbs. However, we leave 10-15cm of stubble to protect the soil surface from drying out and give our OSR seedlings the best microclimate.

Well-branched Our one-pass modified Discordon works well, following the baler as closely as possible and sowing at 45 seeds/sq.m to deliver our target population of 20-25 plants/sq.m.

With the spring development ability of our preferred hybrids, this gives us the really thick-stemmed, well-branched canopies we know deliver best with our three-split, 210kg N/ha liquid fertiliser programme.

We generally set the low disturbance legs at about 15cm but can go deeper to deal with any compaction. Dropping the seed behind the packer into the 25cm grooves created by the DD rings weve fitted ensures it goes in at a consistent 2-3cm before being pressed firmly into place with the double set of DD rings we tow behind the machine.

After extra consolidation and slug pelleting from the Cambridge roll within 24-48 hours, followed by 125kg/ha of DAP, we leave the crop to do what it does best. Falcon ensures we keep on top of cereal volunteers, with Centurion Max a key element in our programme ahead of the AstroKerb for the black-grass control that is one of the main reasons we grow the crop. We only use an insecticide when we cant avoid it.

As the family has a good local source of poultry manure and application without incorporation is permitted after sowing, they are planning to try this instead of DAP in the coming autumn for some extra CSFB deterrence.

Diversion Although large amounts of shot-holing are seldom apparent in crops, Mr Stubbs policy of only spraying off OSR volunteers from his previous crops a week or so ahead of early October wheat drilling almost certainly helps to divert flea beetles from his new seeds.

In addition to preventing canopy growth until he really wants it in spring, not drilling in the first part of August also means few, if any problems with CSFB larvae; certainly none that are any threat to the well-rooted and resilient stands he achieves with his establishment regime.

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