Farms.com Home   News

Don’t Trip on Triple-19

By Jimmy Henning

There are wrong ways to do right things. Repeated use of products like triple-10 (10-10-10) or triple-19 (19-19-19) on hay fields can ultimately make that field unresponsive to the fertilizer that is applied. Don’t get me wrong, fertilizing is a ‘right’ thing. People that fertilize their pasture and hay fields have a special place in my heart. But here is why triple-19 can trip you up.

The nutrients in a hay crop are 100% removed from the field, unless that hay is fed back in the same field. It takes 18 pounds of P2O5 and 50 pounds of K2O fertilizer to replace the nutrients in one ton of grass hay (Table 1). Using triple-10 or triple-19 alone to replace these nutrients is guaranteed to over-fertilize with P or under supply K.

Soils have very different abilities to supply P and K from the mineral parent material. This fact alone is one of the best reasons for a current soil test from hay fields. Repeated use of 200 or even 300 pounds of triple-19 on hay fields will drain the soil of potassium, such that the other fertilizer nutrients are ineffective.



To understand why low K fertility limits other fertilizer benefits, you have to understand what is called the Law of the Minimum, which states that growth only occurs at the rate allowed by the most limiting factor. Think of your field as a barrel and your yield as water. The height of each stave is the level of individual soil nutrients. If your ‘K’ stave is excessively short, your barrel will not hold much water. Low K means low yield in spite of how tall the P stave is.

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Getting Data and Insight on the Cattle Market With Dr. Derrell Peel

Video: Getting Data and Insight on the Cattle Market With Dr. Derrell Peel

If anyone can make sense of the complexities of the cattle market, it is Dr. Derrell Peel of Oklahoma State University. The smallest herd in 64 years, cycles of drought and the consumer have all combined to contribute to this discussion. We also look at the economic picture as a whole and the impact it will have to expand the herd plus the cycle the packer is in right now. One could even call it a perfect storm on the soaring costs of beef.