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c-ray
10-27-2006, 12:57 AM
a no-till seeding technique, for land regeneration

http://www.imprinting.org/

The no-till method for seeding called land imprinting has been under development in Tucson, Arizona since 1976. Ranchers have applied imprinting to restoring perennial grasses on their degraded rangeland for erosion control and forage production. Since 1980 some 20,000 hectares have been interseeded with grasses in southern Arizona. Early imprinters were massive machines with large diameter rollers that were designed to operate on rocky, brushy terrain of the southwestern deserts. Imprinters are now being designed for ecological restoration and the establishment of cover crops. They have smaller diameter rollers and are easier to transport. Some can work on 2:1 slopes and even steeper. Simple seeders, directly driven from the imprinting roller, can deliver complex mixes of native seeds to the roller top where they are carried forward, dropped on the soil surface and then imbedded in the imprint surfaces. V-shaped imprints funnel resources downward where they can work in concert to germinate seeds and establish seedlings.

Based on more than 2 decades of field experience, land imprinting specifications have been developed for ecological restoration and sustainable agriculture. These include general imprinter and seeder design specifications that will help to insure success of revegetation projects. Also experienced fabricators can use these specifications as a guide for constructing state-of-the-art seeding imprinters

IslandTime
11-01-2006, 06:38 PM
How in the hell can they call it "no-till" when it has to be drug around by a cat with rippers in the soil?

Cool idea, but defianately not "no-till" in my book.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tillage

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-till

Taker easy

smokinbasser
11-02-2006, 04:09 PM
Semantics, kinda like GWBs military record.

c-ray
11-02-2006, 07:03 PM
How in the hell can they call it "no-till" when it has to be drug around by a cat with rippers in the soil?

Cool idea, but defianately not "no-till" in my book.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tillage

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-till

Taker easy

good points, maybe they should call it low-till :D

here's some more links and links to links:

http://www.newfarm.org/depts/notill/index.shtml
http://www.newfarm.org/depts/notill/roller_gallery/index.shtml
http://www.rodaleinstitute.org/login/comp_no_till_dl.php

http://www.croproller.com/index.html
Briefly, the Cover Crop Roller was developed to overcome the shortcomings of knocking down an existing cover crop and then planting on no-till farms. Finding the right equipment has been the biggest barrier to no-till farming. Now, with a no-till planter attached to the back of the tractor and the Cover Crop Roller mounted to the front, a farmer can roll and plant all in the same pass!

http://www.no--till.com/switchboard.htm
http://css.wsu.edu/links/no_till.htm
http://www.lesspub.com/cgi-bin/site.pl?ntf/index

c-ray
11-17-2007, 09:50 PM
no-till in a nutshell -> http://www.sdnotill.com/Newsletters/Real%20Dirt.pdf