Damn, wonder if he had a heart attack or some other type of medical problem ?
Damn, wonder if he had a heart attack or some other type of medical problem ?
Someone took a dump in the pool today, where my family was at... they made everyone get out for 30 mins, you know cuz that seems about right, and then they can get right back in the pool.
How often do people usually water their lawns in Iowa? When I lived in Texas I watered 3 days a week. I would think once a week would be enough in Central Iowa. I have no idea. I live in the country and never water my lawn.
Exposure even under the EPA’s standard of 10 milligrams per liter can result in the health risks.
“The nitrate in our water has been increasing for about 40 years now,” said Jason Semprini, a native Iowan and a professor at Des Moines University.
“It’s concerning when we start to see consistent evidence showing that there is no safe level of nitrates for pregnant women in their drinking water,” Semprini said.
Needs a couple of corn stalks to take it over the top....
Actually sub out the palm trees for corn stalks. I'm surprised they didn't think of that.Needs a couple of corn stalks to take it over the top....
It's Raygun...Actually sub out the palm trees for corn stalks. I'm surprised they didn't think of that.
I called Raygun R&D this winter with a timely phrase related to the bitter cold we were experiencing which they thought had legs….but I’m still checking my mailbox for the residual. Technically, they’ve lost me with the connection between Glysophate & nitrate pollution. As a farmer, sometimes I think I need to keep a car in Des Moines with Polk County plates when I go to the Metro!
Corn demands a lot of nitrates to grow. Having a more diverse bio culture would be a good idea. If they're hell bent on ethanol, use sweet grasses like Brazil. They yield more biomass.Replicating MN's 30 ft buffer law wouldn't do much for our nitrate issue. It would provide area for treatment focused practices though.
Buffers are still very valuable for other reasons though. I'd be for a state run CRP type program that is more flexible than the federal program. Allow farmers to hay it or even some flash grazing.
One pipe dream or wild thought would be an investment in some agroforestry systems. Provide a rental payment for ten years or so until the trees/shrubs could start being harvestable.
I really like the idea of extended rotations. It spreads the workload out for the farmer. The wheat crop isn't nearly as leaky as corn or soybeans for nitrate. It also seems like you could add a manure application that would ease the amount that is applied at a given time due to capacity issues.
I called Raygun R&D this winter with a timely phrase related to the bitter cold we were experiencing which they thought had legs….but I’m still checking my mailbox for the residual. Technically, they’ve lost me with the connection between Glysophate & nitrate pollution. As a farmer, sometimes I think I need to keep a car in Des Moines with Polk County plates when I go to the Metro!
It certainly wouldn't hurt, and it certainly would go quite a long way with erosion. It makes me sick at all the waterways I see that are planted to the very edge. One spot I know of, each year a row or two falls into the river. Its not like those crops are harvestable anyway, no one is taking their combine right to the edge.Replicating MN's 30 ft buffer law wouldn't do much for our nitrate issue. It would provide area for treatment focused practices though.
Interesting. Ethanol is not the only product produced through fermentation of corn starch. But I'd assume the water quality issue would apply to most any industrial enzymatic fermentation process.Interesting. Nitrates in water can impact ethanol production. Specifically, nitrate levels in water sources used for ethanol production can affect the fermentation process and, consequently, the overall yield of ethanol. High nitrate concentrations can potentially inhibit microbial activity, reduce ethanol production, or lead to the accumulation of unwanted byproducts. Waste byproducts from fermentation may contain organic compounds, residual nutrients, and chemicals that, if not properly treated, can be harmful when released into surface and ground water.
Most ethanol plants do not (or can not) use surface water sources without special treatment.
Had a neighbor that plants to the edge, with bigger heads the combine is not on the edge. But water critters had tunnels back aways from the edge and he buried the combine in the tunnels. Had a hard time pulling the combine out of the hole with tank of corn and head weight which was also buried.It certainly wouldn't hurt, and it certainly would go quite a long way with erosion. It makes me sick at all the waterways I see that are planted to the very edge. One spot I know of, each year a row or two falls into the river. Its not like those crops are harvestable anyway, no one is taking their combine right to the edge.
The place I see most often that does this, in the fall always has 1-3 rows un-harvested and falling/eroding into the banks of the river.Had a neighbor that plants to the edge, with bigger heads the combine is not on the edge. But water critters had tunnels back aways from the edge and he buried the combine in the tunnels. Had a hard time pulling the combine out of the hole with tank of corn and head weight which was also buried.