Northeast Buckwheat Growers Newsletter
No. 9 June 2000
Edited by Thomas Björkman, Cornell-NYSAES, Geneva,
NY
Are you raising buckwheat in the
Northeast?
Join the Northeast
Buckwheat Growers Association!
The Field Day will be at
ACDS Research, 459 Rt. 96 in Waterloo NY. It is 2 miles east of the Geneva Thruway
exit.
1:00 to 3:30pm. August 29th
Contents
Manisoba in 2000
In a major change, the Birkett Mills will be contracting a new variety
this year. For 2000, the company will be providing Manisoba seed to its
contracted growers, replacing the older variety Manor.
The mill ran extensive tests on Manisoba this winter to determine how to
handle the larger average seed size (there are fewer small seeds). They
also tested the grain for ease of dehulling, cooking times, and textural
qualities to be certain that it would meet the demands of customers of
Kasha and other buckwheat products.
Manisoba is being adopted because it was identified as superior to Manor
in agronomic performance by Thomas Björkman at Cornell University.
Manisoba stood out in trials of diverse types over the years from 1994
through 1998. It also performed well in commercial on-farm trials in 1997,
1998 and 1999. The project supported by the Birkett Mills, and was in cooperation
with Kade Research, which developed Manisoba. The next variety in the pipeline
is called Koto.
Since Manisoba has slightly fewer seed per bushel, the seeding rate
may need to be adjusted up a little from what you use with Manor.
Overall, Manisoba has better early growth and covers the ground better
than Manor. It yields, on average, about 10% more by weight. The only drawback
is that the test weight can be somewhat lower. The adoption of an improved
variety that has been thoroughly tested for the Northeast represents a
significant advance for buckwheat production here.
Watch out for waterlogging
Heavy rain after sowing can lead to weak stands of buckwheat.
These weak stands can yield from nothing to a few hundred pounds per acre.
Previous research in the Björkman lab has implicated seed rot in causing
these poor stands. The plant is drastically weakened if the germinating
seed is waterlogged for even a few hours.
This spring and early summer have been so wet in
the Northeast, that the risk of waterlogging after even a modest rain will
be substantial. Prepare the ground and time the planting to help reduce
this risk.
In 1999 we had the opposite situation. Drier soil
and an absence of thunderstorms at planting made these weak stands rare.
Generally, those who planted into sufficient moisture had a good crop.
This observation suggests that seed rot has a dramatic impact in most years,
and can often be to blame when plants are smaller than expected for a particular
field, and the combine runs for a long time before filling the bin.
Apron fungicide might be useful in reducing this
seed rot. Research is underway to determine whether this product will be
effective. In 1999, stands were excellent in both treated and untreated.
Trials in 2000 are expected to be more telling.
Reducing the potential for seed rot through good
soil management is the first thing to do. Apron may turn out to be an additional
aid, but preventing the conditions that cause problems will always help.
Good tilth, which prevents puddling in the surface layers, is the objective.
Growers who have been successful have found the following practices to
help:
-
Prepare the ground when the moisture is ideal. That
often occurs in early to mid June.
-
Use no-till or zone till to increase infiltration and
minimize crusting.
-
Tile drain and subsoil on heavy soils that have the
potential for high yields.
1999
Harvest
With the severe drought experienced in many parts of
the Northeast in 1999, many crops had low yields. Buckwheat was a notable
exception, turning in the largest in recent years. The high overall yield
is attributed to much reduced seed rot, described above. The sparse rain
after sowing kept these major losses rare. and the relatively dry surface
easily absorbed what did fall. Most fields sown ended up with a respectable
yield
Some growers had more than respectable yield, 25
to 35 bu/ac. (The long-term state average is 15 bu/ac) What they had in
common was sowing buckwheat on heavier land, using the clay soil's greater
water-holding capacity. With the dry conditions, it really paid off to
have good tilth, and to prepare the ground so that moisture was retained.
The heavier soils worked up well during June, and were able to keep the
buckwheat crop supplied with moisture through the whole season
In Cornell trials, the Experiment Station farm yielded
40 bu/ac, while cooperators fields yielded 14, 15 and 33 bu/ac
Warner McCray in Sherman, Chautauqua Co. reported
30 bu per acre. His Langford soil is typical of much of the Southern Tier.
Tiling and subsoiling have improved the drainage so that the crop is never
stunted by waterlogging, yet the clayey soil holds enough water to carry
the crop through a dry season.
2000 Field day moves
The location for the 2000 field day has not been set due
to the weather. It will not be at the Experiment Station in Geneva, but
will be at a site in the northern Finger Lakes managed by ACDS research. If
you received this mailing, you will also get a postcard with the announcement
once the crop is out of the ground. It will also be announced in Country Folks.
The date is Tuesday, August 29, and the event will run
from 1:00 to 3:30 as usual.
Note added: 459 Route 96 in Waterloo.
2
Miles east of Geneva Thruway exit at intersection with Bonnell Rd.
Covering the acres fast
Sowing into a good seedbed is a critical step in raising
buckwheat, but here is often only a narrow planting window as the weather
changes. Two western New York growers have taken different approaches.
Tony Preshiel mixes seed and fertilizer and spreads it rapidly with a fertilizer
spreader. To work it in so that it emerged uniformly, he uses a rolling
cultivator with the teeth retracted almost all the way. This only disturbs
the top inch of soil. He considers disking the seeds in completely unacceptable
because the depth is too inconsistent for uniform emergence. Warner McCray
takes a more conventional route, using a 30-foot drill. Both growers are
able to plant over 100 acres in about a day and a half. Both say that timely
sowing is essential to their success. With the short breaks between storm
we are getting in 2000, taking advantage of the rare opportunities with
ideal planting conditions will make a big difference.
How does wheat perform after a buckwheat crop?
I have heard varied reports about the performance of winter wheat sown
after buckwheat harvest. Some have good experiences, finding the wheat
germinating well in the loose soil, and a relatively weed-free stand going
into the winter. Others find that the wheat does not grow as well as adjacent
fields come spring. A research paper this year from Adrian N'Dayegamiye
in Quebec showed that buckwheat doubled the wheat yield compared to bare
ground (and clover tripled it). Please drop a line to the editor with your
experiences, so we can sort this one out.
-
Abdallahi M. M., N'Dayegamiye A. 2000. Effects of green manures on soil
physical and biological properties and on wheat yields and N uptake. ÷
Canadian Journal of Soil Science 80: 81-89.
Northeast buckwheat production
The Census of Agriculture
was done in 1997. The results were recently reported.
The great Red River floods took the Dakotas out of their traditional
top spot, to give NY and PA a tie for the states with the most farms planting
buckwheat. However, the number of acres in bickwheat is much higher in
those states.
| State |
Farms |
acres |
bushels |
| NY |
101 |
2423 |
44,300 |
| PA |
101 |
1587 |
30,800 |
| OH |
14 |
345 |
5,800 |
| MD |
10 |
166 |
3,155 |
| WV |
7 |
46 |
1,038 |
| NH |
3 |
3 |
11 |
| ME |
1 |
not |
reported |
| CT |
1 |
not |
reported |
| Total |
238 |
4570 |
85,104 |
Buckwheat for health
Research continues to accumulate that buckwheat is good for your health.
Jun Kayashita and his Japanese team has found that buckwheat protein reduces
breast cancer tumors by suppressing estradiol concentrations.
J. Kayashita, I. Shimaoka, M. Nakajoh, N. Kishida and N. Kato. 1999.
Consumption of a buckwheat protein extract retards 7,12- dimethylbenz(alpha)anthracene-induced
mammary carcinogenesis in rats. Bioscience Biotechnology and Biochemistry
63:1837-1839
Female rats were examined for the effects of feeding buckwheat
protein extract (BWPE) on the development of mammary tumor caused by administration
of 7,12-dimethylbenz(alpha)anthracene. The percentage of rats with palpable
mammary tumors and serum estradiol were lower in the BWPE-fed animals than
the casein-fed ones, implying that BWPE intake retarded the mammary carcinogenesis
by lowering serum estradiol..
Buckwheat and nematodes
Turning in buckwheat green manure or crop residue is good for a lot of
things. Recent research has shown that inhibiting nematodes is not one
of them. Al- Rehiayani found that any green manure was helpful in cutting
tomato nematode populations, but buckwheat was least effective of the ten
they tried. Similarly, LaMondia found that buckwheat was the leas effective
rotation crop of four they tried for reducing root-knot nematode injury
to strawberries. If you are managing rotations to keep nematodes in check,
buckwheat will only be a neutral part of that rotation.
-
Al- Rehiayani S., Hafez S. 1998. Host status and green manure effect of
selected crops on Meloidogyne chitwoodi race 2 and Pratylenchus neglectus.
÷ Nematropica 28: 213-230.
-
LaMondia J. A. 1999. Influence of rotation crops on the strawberry pathogens
Pratylenchus penetrans, Meloidogyne hapla, and Rhizoctonia fragariae. ÷
Journal of Nematology 31: 650-655.
Update from Manitoba
The Manitoba Buckwheat Growers Association is sponsoring a checkoff vote
this year. They are hoping to raise money to promote local markets, to
do production-related research, and to leverage government funds. The proposed
checkoff is 3/4% of net sales with a maximum of C$250 (US$170) per grower.
The vote, scheduled for July, requires a yes vote by 60% of the votes cast
by eligible growers.
Unlike our association, MBGA is incorporated and has an elected board
of directors and an office.
The province of Manitoba produces about 70% of Canada's buckwheat. About
300 farmers raised 32,000 acres of buckwheat in 1999. That is similar to
the amount raised in the whole Northeast. Last year they grew 8000 acres
of the new variety Koto, which received a price premium from Japanese buyers.
NBGA
One of the things that members want from the Northeast
Buckwheat Growers Association is the chance to share buckwheat-growing
ideas with other farmers. Iām happy to print your good ideas here.
NBGA on the WWW
Buckwheat and the Northeast Buckwheat Growers Association
are on the World Wide Web. An on-line Buckwheat
Production Guide for the Northeast and back issues of this newsletter
are available there. www.nysaes.cornell.edu/hort/buckwheat/.
Only members get mailings
This newsletter goes out to those who have signed up
as members of NBGA. If you know of growers who would be interested in joining,
please have them drop a line or make a quick phone call. There is no charge
to join.
In the past many non-members were included on the
mailing list, but we have had to drop people who never responded. We also
limit newsletter circulation to the Northeast. People elsewhere are welcome
to read the newsletter on the web site.
We have members who are growers, processors/seed
industry and extension. The complete list is distributed to members annually.
Northeast Buckwheat Growers Association
Send comments, questions and membership requests to:
Dr. Thomas Björkman, Department of Horticultural Sciences
Cornell University-NYSAES, Geneva, NY 14456 (315) 787-2218
or email tnb1 @ cornell.edu
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