DSC_0175.jpg

Cultivating a No-Till ‘State of Mind’

Measured fertilizer applications, copious amounts of residue and dogged determination have all helped Leon Sowers improve the diversity and viability of his Kansas operation.


Pictured Above: MORE VIABLE. Leon Sowers says adopting no-till practices 18 years ago allowed him to grow a more diverse rotation, which now includes corn, soybeans, winter wheat and milo, as well as specialty crops like sunflowers, canola and sesame. Although prices aren’t very good, he keeps wheat in his rotation because it produces plentiful residue to protect his soils from the elements

THERE WAS A time when Leon Sowers felt killing weeds and preparing a seedbed were logical reasons to till fields. But in his family’s case, he eventually realized that approach wasn’t working. 

“We were killing the weeds, but tearing up the best seedbed we had, and we’d work all summer to work it back down to have the seedbed we started with,” he recalls.

After going to a farm tour hosted by Dakota Lakes Farm manager Dwayne Beck 18 years ago in South Dakota, Sowers came home with a different outlook. His big Versatile tractor and other tillage equipment was sold off and the money was used to switch out his John Deere 455 drill, which he says produced mediocre no-till stands, for a Deere 750 no-till drill.

“That was when I decided if they could do it, I could do it,” he says. “No-till is as much a state of mind as it is a farming practice.”

Many Options

Sowers no-tills a wide variety of cash crops on 3,700 acres near Murdock in central Kansas, and grazes 85 head of cows on 700 acres of grass. 

To view the content, please subscribe or login.
 Premium content is for our Digital-only and Premium subscribers. A Print-only subscription doesn't qualify. Please purchase/upgrade a subscription with the Digital product to get access to all No-Till Farmer content and archives online. Learn more about the different versions and what is included.

John dobberstein2

John Dobberstein

John Dobberstein was senior editor of No-Till Farmer magazine and the e-newsletter Dryland No-TillerHe previously covered agriculture for the Tulsa World and worked for daily newspapers in Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Joseph, Mich. He graduated with a B.A. in journalism and political science from Central Michigan University.

Top Articles

Current Issue

NTF_June_2024_Cover.jpg

No-Till Farmer

Get full access NOW to the most comprehensive, powerful and easy-to-use online resource for no-tillage practices. Just one good idea will pay for your subscription hundreds of times over.

Subscribe Now

View More

Must Read Free Eguides

Download these helpful knowledge building tools

View More
Top Directory Listings