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John Deere offering HarvestLab 3000 Grain Sensing For Combines

John Deere offering HarvestLab 3000 Grain Sensing For Combines

John Deere is now offering HarvestLab™ 3000 Grain Sensing on 2018 or newer John Deere S700 Series Combines. Grain Sensing continuously measures and monitors protein, starch and oil values in wheat, barley or canola in real time as the combine is harvesting. This site-specific data can then be viewed in the combine, or in the John Deere Operations Center™.
 
“When a farmer has site-specific data on a field’s harvest quality they know if the wheat coming out of the field is of baking or fodder quality,” said Christopher Murray, marketing manager for John Deere. “This knowledge gives them the ability to store their grain in separate batches according to quality and then market that grain more selectively.”
 
Site-specific data helps farmers precisely document the harvest as the grain quality is recorded at each individual point in the field. “This level of detail lets them compare varieties or confirm if machines were properly set,” Murray said. “They are also able to see areas of the field that most successfully converted nutrients into yield, protein or oil, so next season’s fertilizer plan can be adjusted.”

Grain Sensing is the fourth application of John Deere HarvestLab 3000. For years, farmers have successfully used HarvestLab for constituent sensing on John Deere self-propelled forage harvesters, for manure sensing on liquid manure applicators, and as a stationary desktop unit to analyze forage and samples.

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Exploring the AgriSuite Greenhouse Gas Decision Support Tool

Video: Exploring the AgriSuite Greenhouse Gas Decision Support Tool

The Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA) has developed a free online feature for farmers to help them measure their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions on-farm and explore options for reducing their carbon footprint.

In this webinar, you'll hear from James Dyck, an OMAFRA engineer who helped design and build the tool now available on AgriSuite. Anyone interested can use the tool to input custom details about their farm operation at https://agrisuite.omafra.gov.on.ca/ and by selecting the Greenhouse Gas option.

You'll also benefit from a step-by-step walk-through of the tool from Norm Lamothe, a farmer outside Peterborough who has used the tool to make decisions on his own farm and assess the impact of different mitigation practices.