dimanche 16 avril 2017

Flag The Technology Programs And How They Work

By Martha Smith


Agricultural tech is always in the process of being improved on, and the modern farm can have lots of technologically advanced processes, systems and materials in use. Some of the things that these places use can range from the simple to the complex. All will have their specific uses, and when taken together, form an overall complex that needs good management.

For farmers today, multicrop planting is often key to a successful spread, along with some kind of livestock breeding. Flag the technology enables farmers to identify the pesticide needs of specific sections of their fields. This helps in being able to use the correct kind of chemicals on any part of the farm that need them.

Many pesticides are now friendlier, using less or not toxic elements, something pesticide companies were criticized for. But using them is also tagged for certain species, growth and ground factors during the planting and field maintenance. Grains have varying needs for chemicals, for instance, from other crops like flowers and vegetables.

Flagging is a simple enough system to use, and it is a concern that is very useful for farms that have what is called stacked field technologies. This means there are certain tech concerns for each kind of field. These might be linked to the use of certain brands of chemicals, industrial crop system, or the growth programs that have certain chemical distribution schedules.

Samples of this tech that are in common use these days are Liberty or Clearfield planting systems and the popular Roundup process. For this last, crops that have had their DNA refashioned are protected against the use of some other chemicals. These can be anything, from corn to canola, to cotton and sugarbeets, or soybeans and sunflowers.

Clearfield involves the chemical control of broadleaf weed systems and is tasked to eliminate residual grass growth. The Liberty process provides improved systems for delicate plantings and the hard weeds that prey on their spaces. Technologies like these are vital to making large farms work with cash crops for all kinds of markets in the nation.

Flags are used to distinguish them, like bright green for Liberty Link, white for Roundup ready systems, and bright yellow for Clearfield cropping. Other popular or preferred colors in use are red, which is for conventional cropping involving no herbicides, or checkered black and white. The preferred size is for a 12 inch by 18 inch triangle supported by fiberglass poles.

The colors easily identify a field for a crop duster plane, or for large chemical distribution land machines. If these flags are up, there will be no mistakes made in distributing different kinds of chemicals that might become dangerous when combined. Keeping them separate and working in different sections spells good management and safety.

The systematized use of flags is a standard for most farms operating in the nation. The spell efficiency for all farming operations, because the many planted acres are hard to distinguish when different plant species are used. The flags minimize the hassle of identifying fields whenever chemical distribution is needed and makes the processes that much more workable for all kinds of farming needs.




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