Are you storing your data in a secure location?
If your combine harvester is capable of yield mapping, do you use it? Yield map data is a powerful tool for making decisions on your farm. It is a record of how your crops reacted and performed under that season’s constraints. Constraints and variation may be apparent in your crops nutrient levels or application methods, or available water in the profile at critical times in the plant’s life cycle,and in most cases a combination of all the above!
I’ve been to many agronomy seminars where they always reiterate that when you sow your crop it starts at its maximum yield potential and everything from that point on reduces that potential. So, your yield data is a map of how well the crop has performed under that season’s conditions and how much variability there is in the soil profile within a paddock. Many arable farmers have paid for the technology but aren’t able to harness the power of the information that it provides. Agri Optics NZ are here to help with this.
Yield monitoring in any combine |
The difference between raw and processed data |
A processed yield map |
Making useful yield maps – the essential information
- ‘Rubbish in equals rubbish out’ – you only get one opportunity to collect this data so ‘do it once and do it right’
- Start the season with an empty data card - save a copy of all previous data to your computer and then ‘clean’ the card
- Naming –use the same naming for the same paddock each year as this makes finding your data easier at the end of the season
- Check the flow and moisture sensors – if these are not working properly then everything that follows may be a waste of time
- Calibration – at the start of harvesting each grain type calibrate the flow sensor
- Operation setup – make sure the cutter bar width is correct, as well as the flow delay is as accurate as possible
- Card check and back-up – confirm data is being logged by importing it into your mapping software or sending it to your Precision Ag specialist once you start for the season...not at the end of this season! Backup the data as a raw format throughout the harvest season also.
- If you collect the data as accurately as possible in the first place, then post-processing of the data to make it a useful resource is much simpler!
Yield data is the final measure of a seasons work. Yield data allows for insights into different management practices and the old adage “what gets measured gets managed” comes to mind.
Have a good harvest!
Chris