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Corn Planting Time?

Corn Planting Time?

On Tuesday April 28, WAC and CCE staff checked soil temperature in several fields in Delaware County, both corn stubble and grass sods. Temperature were taken at the 2-3” depth.  The results are in the table below.
 
The results were surprising, despite the snow fall only two days prior; most corn fields, both those with and without rye cover crops and across a range of elevations were in the 55-60° F range,  and some even warmer!  
 
The guideline for minimum soil temperature to commence planting field corn is 50° F.  Clearly many fields, especially those that are well drained are ready to plant with the rain stops. 
 
One caveat to planting when temps are at 50° F especially on less well drained ground, is if a cold rain is in the forecast followed by a forecast of cool temperature;  In this case the seed can imbibe cold water but not experience warm enough temperatures for long enough to initiate or sustain root growth. In this scenario, seed rot and inconsistent stands are more likely.  This is far less likely on well drained soils, as the soils will dry out and warm up faster at this point.  The risk would be soils that get wet and chilled and remain so for an extended period of time.  See our note below about spring killed sod fields.
 
Most sod fields were still in the mid to upper 40° F range, due to the ground cover.  These fields still need a little time to warm up. 
 
Our guidelines on planting corn at this point follow are as follow:

  • Well drained fields:  As soon as fields are trafficable and the seed slot can be opened and closed properly after the pending rains, planting may commence.  Take advantage of an early start to get ahead before haying!
  • Moderately drained fields:  Stay tuned to our soil temp reports, or check your own.  Once temperature are consistently above 50° F and no cold rains are in the forecast, planting may begin.
  • First year corn on spring killed sods:  Stay tuned to our soil temp reports, or check them yourself. Once soil temps are consistently above 50° F and no cold rains are in the forecast, planting may begin.  Be careful on spring killed sod fields that are on less well drained soils!  The sod residue and the moisture will keep the soil cooler longer; monitor soil temps and make sure seed slot gets closed properly.

The best way to know when it’s safe to begin planting is to check soil temps. Check them to a depth of 2-3”, a typical planting depth. If you want fields checked, let us know.

Happy Earth Day 2020

Everyday at the Watershed Agricultural Council is spent working to protect water quality in countless ways in the NYC Watershed.

Today (April 22nd), as we celebrate Earth Day, our staff from around the region are doing their part locally. Various staff and their families spent the morning cleaning up roadside and streamside trash in their neighborhoods. We all can make a difference, every single day! ??

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Using Surplus Milk as Fertilizer

Provisional Guidance for COVID-19 Emergency Response

Given the current market disruptions created by the COVID-19 emergency, farms may continue to play important roles in the safe, agronomic, and environmentally sound recycling of surplus milk.  Please find provisional guidance for recycling milk and manure and milk mixtures as a fertilizer for crops here.  It’s been developed to support the efforts of farmers, planners, Districts, and other Ag conservation partners in their responses to the COVID-19 emergency. 

The guidance was developed by the NYS Department of Agriculture and Markets, in partnership with the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (NYS DEC) and the Cornell University Nutrient Management Spear Program, Department of Animal Science, and PRO-DAIRY Program, and in coordination with the NYS DEC’s enforcement discretion memo regarding Part 360 regulations (specifically Part 361-2.3(b) and (c)) and the milk surplus caused by COVID-19 (read memo here).

Watershed Agricultural Program participants please contact your Whole Farm Planner or Nutrient Management Planner if you have any questions or issues.

Paycheck Protection Program for Farmers

Farms are eligible for the Paycheck Protection Program. Here’s a helpful video from Farm Credit East, ACA on everything you need to know.

Paycheck Protection Program: Insight into program basics and how your business may qualify

“A cornerstone provision of the CARES Act is the Paycheck Protection Program, a forgivable loan program administered by the Small Business Administration, to provide loans to businesses impacted by the current state of the economy. This webinar explained the basics of the program, what size loan you may qualify for and how this program could assist your ag businesses with near-term payroll expenses.

For a PDF of the PowerPoint presentation, click here.” – Farm Credit East

Watch the video on Youtube here.

Photo above by Farm Credit East.

April Micro Grants Available

Our April grant round is now open! Are you a farmer, logger, forester, forest landowner or Pure Catskills farm/forest member with business property inside the West of Hudson NYC Watershed? Apply for our Marketing, Staffing, Event/Mileage Reimbursement or Training grants! The application deadline for this round is April 30, 2020. *NOTE: The Watershed Agricultural Council will only be accepting online applications for this April 2020 grant round. If you need assistance with please contact Kristan Morley at kmorley@nycwatershed.org.

Apply online here.

Emergency Changes to the Open Meetings Law in Response to COVID-19

The Governor in Executive Order No. 202.1 has relaxed the Open Meetings Law to allow meetings of public bodies to be held remotely by conference call or similar services. 

Suspension of law allowing the attendance of meetings telephonically or other similar service:
Article 7 of the Public Officers Law, to the extent necessary to permit any public body to meet and take such actions authorized by the law without permitting in public in-person access to meetings and authorizing such meetings to be held remotely by conference call or similar service, provided that the public has the ability to view or listen to such proceeding and that such meetings are recorded and later transcribed;”

As a result of the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Emergency and State and Federal bans on large meetings or gatherings and pursuant to Governor Cuomo’s Executive Order 220.1 issued on March 12, 2020 suspending the Open Meetings Law, the Watershed Agricultural Council Easement Committee Meeting scheduled for April 1st, 2020 at 10:00 AM will be held electronically via conference call instead of a public meeting open for the public to attend in person. Members of the public that are interested in listening to the Easement Committee meeting can contact Ryan Naatz, Program Director at ryananaatz@nycwatershed.org or 607-435-3344, prior to the meeting for conference call information.  Minutes of the Easement Committee will be transcribed and posted on the agency’s website.

Read the Public Agenda here.

 

 

Farmer Relief Fund

Our partner, American Farmland Trust, is excited to announce that the application for AFT’s Farmer Relief Fund is now live!

AFT will award farmers with cash grants of up to $1,000 each to help them weather the current storm of market disruptions caused by the coronavirus crisis.

Eligible applicants include any small and mid-size direct-market producers. These are defined as producers with annual gross revenue of between $10,000 and $1 million from sales at farmers markets and/or direct sales to restaurants, caterers, schools, stores, or makers who use farm products as inputs. If this describes your farming operation, apply here.

The application (available in both English and Spanish) is easy to complete but will require applicants to include sufficient detail to ensure AFT is awarding producers that have the greatest needs. Applicants will be asked to estimate their financial loss.

The initial application period goes until April 23, with grants beginning to be made by May 1.

More Information. 

Apply Here.

 

Important COVID-19 Updates

For Immediate Release: March 19, 2020

The Watershed Agricultural Council has been closely monitoring the evolving COVID-19 (Coronavirus) situation. The safety and security of our staff and participants is our highest priority. In the interests of public health, and following guidance from local, state and federal authorities, as well as our closest collaborative partners we have decided to transition all WAC non-essential staff to remote-work operations. This is due to public health guidance to increasing “social distancing.”

Read more here: nycwatershed.org/covid-19