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Showing posts with label Farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Farming. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

Latest Farming Equipment For Sale


The nature of farming which requires intensive labor and time expended, many manual farming processes were mechanized to help save time and energy. Over the years more and more processes were automated to help ease hard labor and to lighten the work load of farmers. This is where farming or agricultural equipment comes in. There are different types of agricultural machinery that may be found in the market today. Some categories of the machinery are the following:

Cultivation and Seeding Machines:

These are machines that help prepare the soil for planting such as ploughs and hoes, aerators and cultivators. Ploughs loosen the soil and turn it to prepare the land for planting. Cultivators cut in to the soil lines or grooves where seeds are planted. Machines such as row planters and seed drills are also classified under this. A row planter helps the farmer plant seeds several rows at a time while the seed drill plants seeds and covers the seeds with soil.

Spreaders:

Machines that help farmers fertilize the plants are called spreaders. When liquids such as pesticides and other chemicals are used on plants, the machines used are known as sprayers. These types of equipment help disperse or spread the fertilizers and/or chemicals quickly over a large area of land.

Harvesters:

When the crops are ready to be harvested, machines known as harvesters are utilized. Combines for example harvest grain, pick and clean the crop and even separates the wheat. Other types of harvesters include the bean harvester, potato harvester, maize harvester and many more.

Tractor:

The tractor is the most important equipment in a farm as it helps haul all other farm machines including trailers. It is available in many different sizes to cater to the needs of the farm.

Many different kinds of machinery are now available with some of the machines having very specific uses. Hay balers help gather cut grass and tie them together into neat bales. There are also loaders that help move harvested crops from one place to another.

The machines may also be categorized as self-propelled machinery and/or implements. All of these machines help the farmers in every step in the production of food whether through plants or animals. Each machine has a particular purpose and capacities vary depending on the particular needs of a farmer and on the size and capacity of the farm.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Farming Implements And Agricultural Equipment

The process of cultivating the land stems back over many millennial and is still as important now as it has ever been. With each huge advance in technology, the techniques used to create more efficient farming implements has increased. The landscape may still be much the same as it was in the early days, but the methods of working that land are now unimaginably different.

From scythes to horse driven ploughs, right up to the sleek combines of today, which replaced unreliable threshing machines; the climate of farming is now run by motors. After all, the most important aspect of farming is time - and to get the most land worked in as little time as possible is the key to success.

Arguably, the climax of the industrial revolution in the mid 19th Century saw the largest growth in evolution of agricultural implements. It was a time of mass conversion from old methods to new and people yearned for an easier way of doing things. With the advent of the engine, factories could mass produce inventions and there followed many races to patent the best machine possible.

Before the industrial revolution, the farming community used much the same equipment that had been seen on the land for many hundreds of years prior. The advent of mass industry changed all that, as did the idea of faster worldwide commerce and trading. The world became a smaller place and money fuelled the production of new, exciting products.

Implements such as the corn picker, grain lift and cotton harvester greatly inspired similar types of machinery. These made farming quicker by carrying out multiple jobs at once. This, in turn, increased profits for the farmers and became incredibly popular devices. The cutting of hay and creation of bales was always labor intensive and took many hours to complete. The invention of new cutting machines led to many improvements and the process was soon made significantly easier. The baler became wide spread during the mid 19th century and soon farming was becoming more and more mechanized.
The last great revolution came in the early 20th century, with the birth of the car and the world wars pushing technological boundaries ever further. Agriculture needed to be made faster and on a larger scale than ever before. With the introduction of plough-led tractors the time of the ox and horse on the fields became increasingly rare. Farming implements have gone through much change over the last three hundred years, as industry took over the world.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Popular Alternative Of Farming

Tilling is used since centuries to remove mix of soil amendments, to remove weeds, to shape the soil into rows and to make rows for irrigation and to soft the soil for easy seeding. But, recent researches have raised finger upon their real effectiveness and agricultural worth. Re-posts state that tiling may lead to many unfavorable effects. Soil compaction; soil aggregates degradation; organic matter loss and soil microbes disruption are major losses. Regular tilling may disrupt mockeries, earthworms, soil erosion and arthropods also. No-till farming offer freedom from these unfavorable effects, which were commonly unknown. No-till farming also called 'Zero Tilling' is an unconventional way of growing crops year after year without disturbing the field soil through tillage. No-till farming is the emerging trend among the farmers worldwide.

The benefits of no-till farming can be divided into different categories:

  • Profit/economics/yield
  • Environmental
  • Cost
  • Management

The commonly accepted benefits of zero-till farming are:

  • Reduced labor requirements
  • Fuel savings
  • Time savings
  • Reduced machinery use
  • Long- term productivity
  • Better surface water level
  • Less soil erosion
  • Better moisture retention
  • Increased water infiltration
  • More wildlife
  • Decreased compaction of soil
  • Reduced carbon gases release
  • Less air pollution

Nature laws rule the productivity of farming lands. It is must to respect these rules if we want long term sustainable agricultural gains. Any farming system that contributes to reduce organic substances of soil is not good for long term farming interests. Under subtropical or tropical conditions, intensive tillage generally moralizes organic matters more quickly than reposition. It results in decrease of organic content and diminishing in crop yields. Under tropical conditions, repeated tillage generally damages soil structure leading to rise in soil temperature that delivers negative effects upon root growth and soil flora. Any agricultural system that causes nutrients losses is not sustainable.

No-till farming also requires experience and skills to do it in right way to secure the gains. If it is not done correctly, production may drop considerably. Perfect combination of techniques, equipments, pesticides, cover crops, crop rotation, fertilizers and irrigation process make this a unique experience in farming because it is cheaper, convenient and less time involving. The worldwide growing trend for no-tilling farming proves its projected benefits. If you want to bet sure about the results before switching over to this popular alternative farming procedure, start it under the guidance of experts; for this, you don't need to pay because many agriculture research centers offer free consultancy.