Get Full Site Access!

Register! Get a FREE downloadable report
from No-Till Farmer!


NEW PACKAGE DEAL

SCROLL DOWN to the bottom of the page to see the special 40th Anniversary offer on our best-selling items!

NNTC Presentations!

You can download audiofiles of the 2011 NNTC speaker presentations for just $19.95 each.

Check out the topics.

If you attended the 2010 or 2011 NNTC, contact us today at (800) 645-8455 for a special discount to get each file for just $4.95 each!

Average Rating: none
Your rating: none

Stripper Header Boosts Conservation Efforts

Harvesting grains with a relatively new and underused device called a "stripper header" may boost profits and conservation benefits at the same time, according to an Agricultural Research Service (ARS) study.

Farmers in the harsh climate of Colorado looked to ARS scientists Brien Henry, Merle Vigil and David Nielsen to determine if it was worth considering the new combine header instead of a traditional one. Vigil, a soil scientist, and Nielsen, an agronomist, work at the ARS Central Great Plains Research Station in Akron, Colo. Henry, a plant geneticist, was formerly at the Akron facility and now works at the ARS Corn Host Plant Resistance Research Unit in Mississippi State, Miss.

The stripper header removes just the head of grain, leaving the rest of the plant standing to enhance precipitation storage and erosion protection. Traditional combine headers cut off most of the plant stalk with a sickle and leave the stubble short.

The researchers studied whether the stripper header would reduce yields by losing grain through increased shattering, and whether it would work as well with millet as it does with wheat.

In a 4-year experiment with proso millet, they showed that the header did not reduce yields. And it left up to an 18-inch-tall stubble, compared to 3 to 4 inches left by the combine's sickle bar header. For wheat, the stripper header leaves 2-foot-tall stubble, compared to 6 to 8 inches left by the sickle bar header.

"The Akron area is dry, with strong winds," Vigil says. "Each year of the study, these winds blew away a third of the millet residue left by the combine's sickle bar header within 10 days after harvest.

"This crop averaged only 2 tons per acre of residue measured about a week after harvest. There were 3 tons per acre of residue for the stripper-harvested crop."

Farmers usually harvest millet in two operations: one pass with a machine that swaths the plants into windrows, and a second pass with a combine to remove the grain. The stripper header eliminates the need to swath the plants, saving time and fuel. The more crops on which a farmer can use the stripper header, the more affordable the machine becomes, the researcher say.



Share this page: Add to Del.icio.us! Add to Digg! Add to StumbleUpon! Add to Newsvine! Add to Facebook! Add to Google! Add to Yahoo! Add to Technorati! Add to Twitter! Add to LinkedIn! Add to MySpace!
COMMENTS: 2
Stripper Header
Posted from: Daniel Morris, 4/27/11 at 8:08 AM CDT
Visit www.shelbourne.com
Stripper Header
Posted from: Frank Spencer Harm, 4/26/11 at 6:12 PM CDT
What does a stripper header look like??

Post comment / Discuss story * Required Fields
Your name:
E-mail *:
Subject:
Comment *:
Please enter the characters that you see in the field below.

© 2011. Lessiter Publications and No-Till Farmer. 225 Regency Court, Suite 200, Brookfield, WI, 53045. PHONE: (800) 645-8455, E-MAIL: info@lesspub.com.