Bio Strip-Till with Donn Branton

Published: Sept. 28, 2023, 3:18 p.m.

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One of the valuable aspects of this series is that it has given us a chance to talk to farmers at all different stages of their soil health journey. It\\u2019s particularly inspiring to talk to someone who has been at this a long time and is really seeing the benefits of some of these practices. New York farmer Donn Branton discusses how decades of experimenting and learning has led him to develop his system of growing no-till non-GMO corn and soybeans with practices like cover crops and bio strip-till in Western New York.\\xa0

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\\u201cThe water infiltration, the earthworm activity, those are the biggest things. Drove around with one of the soil water technicians one winter day and I said, you see that brown snowbank there? Yeah. Drive up the road a little further next to our field. What color is that one? It\'s white. What\'s going on? I said, it\'s wind erosion. You know, some things like that are so obvious when you\'re keen to it.\\u201d - Donn Branton

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Don has a really interesting story that led him into farming on his own in 1979. Since that time he\\u2019s often been ahead of the curve with everything from reducing tillage to adding cover crops to embracing variable rate technology to planting corn into biostrips.\\xa0

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\\u201cOne of the biggest things when we first started doing reduced till, heavy rainfall come through. Neighbors would have standing water, we wouldn\'t. Okay, what\'s going on? Well, we got water infiltration and had earthworm middens.\\u201d - Donn Branton

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This Week on Soil Sense:

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  • Meet New York farmer Donn Branton and discover his long term efforts towards soil health on his operation

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  • Explore Donn\\u2019s different soil health practices, the many benefits he\\u2019s observed and the additional revenue he\\u2019s enjoyed

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Thank you to the Soy Checkoff for sponsoring this Farmers for Soil Health series of the Soil Sense podcast. This show is produced by Dr. Abbey Wick, Dr. Olivia Caillouet, and Tim Hammerich, with support from the United Soybean Board, the University of Missouri Center for Regenerative Agriculture and the Soil Health Institute.

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If you are interested in what soil health looks like in practice and on the farm, please subscribe and follow this show on your favorite podcast app, and leave us a rating and review while you\\u2019re there. Check out the Farmers for Soil Health website at FarmersForSoilHealth.com.\\xa0

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