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Farm Drainage Problems and Solutions

By Madelyn Celovsky

Any farmer who has had a tile backup or blowout knows how excess water can negatively affect their crop. Subsurface tile drainage removes excess water from the soil to create good fieldwork and crop growth conditions on poorly drained soils. When properly designed, installed and maintained, subsurface drainage systems can perform well for decades. However, many design, installation and management considerations can lead to the under performance of subsurface drainage systems. For the August 3 edition of the MSU Extension Field Crops Virtual Breakfast SeriesDr. Ehsan Ghane, MSU Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering assistant professor and MSU Extension specialist, will describe how to identify and correct underperformance issues. Underperformance from root clogging, sediment clogging, soil compaction and under design will be discussed.

Following Dr. Ghane’s presentation, Michigan’s state climatologist, Dr. Jeff Andresen, will provide a much-anticipated weekly weather summary and forecast.

The Michigan State University Extension Field Crops Virtual Breakfast series will run every Thursday from March 30 through Sept. 21, 7 – 8 a.m. EDT live via Zoom. Farmers, agribusiness personnel and others interested in agriculture can interact with MSU Extension specialists and educators to get their questions answered. Michigan pesticide applicators can earn enough restricted use pesticide (RUP) credits during the season to recertify their credential. One RUP credit (1A, 1B, Comm or Private Core) and one continuing education unit (CEU) for Certified Crop Advisors (CCA) are available with each live session.

Each week features a 15-minute presentation on a timely topic from a MSU Extension specialist or educator followed by a 15-minute weather summary and forecast by MSU Extension state climatologist Jeff Andresen. Participants then receive information to apply for credits and can leave or stay for a Q&A session. In addition to the scheduled speakers, other MSU field crops specialists and educators are frequently part of the call and available to answer questions.

Participating is easy and free! You can join the live meeting via Zoom using a computer, tablet, mobile device or regular phone line. If you are new to Zoom, simply download the Zoom app and you will be ready to join online every week to see visuals shared by presenters. A phone-in option is also available for the audio portion only.

Participants must use a one-time signup to receive an email notification with instructions for joining the Virtual Breakfast as well as weekly reminders. Registrants can opt out at any time.

Source : msu.edu

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