Dryland Farming

Dryland farming is an agricultural technique for cultivating land which receives little rainfall. Dryland farming is used in the Great Plains region of North American and in other grain growing regions such as the steppes of Eurasia, for example in Ukraine and southern Russia as well as Argentina. Winter wheat is the typical crop although skilled dryland farmers sometimes grow corn, beans or even watermelons. Successful dryland farming is possible with as little as 15 inches of precipitation a year, but much more successful with 20 inches or more. In marginal regions, a farmer should be financially able to survive occasional crop failures, perhaps of several years running. A soil which absorbs and holds moisture is helpful as is the practice of leaving stubble standing in the field to catch blowing snow..

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
mapam
alexander v. kuprin
rob mcvey
englefield
mukacheve
doug morch
johann matthus bechstein
aidan banks
bojan krizaj
matt dabbs
ticon
liz claman
magnetrixx
craig raine
elspeth howe, baroness howe of idlicote
prince of monaco
hashomer hatzair
antonio damasio
big brovaz
william bateson
howard marks
sonus
ludwig bechstein
congress of the dominican republic
victor koman
gerard beekmans
eastern counties railway
pratt & whitney f135
starsailor (band)
e8 (mathematics)
bechstein
hilbert plya conjecture
die (manufacturing)
asymptotic freedom
tina brooks
great eastern railway
olaf dreyer
chamber of deputies of the dominican republic
carlo bonomi
ion atanasiu
nima arkani hamed
minidvd
ancient olympic games
eastern counties football league