home news forum careers events suppliers solutions markets expos directories catalogs resources advertise contacts
 
News Page

The news
and
beyond the news
Index of news sources
All Africa Asia/Pacific Europe Latin America Middle East North America
  Topics
  Species
Archives
News archive 1997-2008
 

United Kingdom - RGT Bairstow wheat doing well ‘in every situation’


United Kingdom
August 25, 2023

Ken Goodger is very satisfied with his wheat harvest at Pates Farm, near Welney, Norfolk, which he completed on 22 August.

He increased his area of RGT Bairstow to 28ha this season, following the variety’s exceptional performance in 2022 across a 6ha block.

The farm’s key focus is on herbs and potatoes in the autumn, so all wheats are later drilled. “We drilled the Bairstow in late October and early November, and it really has done well in every situation,” says Ken. “We all commented on how nice the sample looked, it was very clean and bold.”

While output was a bit lower this harvest, following the general trend, the variety again delivered the farm’s top yield.
 


“As a first wheat Bairstow has done remarkably well – it averaged over 10t/ha,” Ken says, who adds the better yields came from his heavier fen skirt soils.

Grain test results show a specific weight of 77.5kg/hl, protein content at 11.35% and a Hagberg of 217. Ken has been offered a £15/t soft wheat premium over feed into a local mill for the end of August and £10t/ha premium beyond that.

Ken also grew 40ha of RGT Saki, as a first and second wheat. First wheat followed chamomile or winter barley, after the latter it was more variable, but overall yields were above 9t/ha.

Good quality – 75-76kg/hl/12-13%/270 – secured the same premiums as the Bairstow.  “I like RGT Saki, it has done well as a second wheat and better than our second wheats last year. We’ll be growing both these varieties again – that really is no-brainer for us.”

Ken’s patience to cut at lower moisture content has paid off. “We cut herbs in the morning and then go off to harvest the cereals in the afternoon. We have a high capacity combine and we’ve only had a couple of loads of what I would call wet wheat.”

Although his neighbours had a lot of septoria pressure, it was not an issue for Ken. “We normally get a bit of yellow rust, but the RAGT varieties were pretty resistant to that – our disease levels were fairly low.”

 



More news from: RAGT Seeds Limited


Website: http://www.ragt.co.uk

Published: August 25, 2023

The news item on this page is copyright by the organization where it originated
Fair use notice

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

  Archive of the news section

 

 


Copyright @ 1992-2025 SeedQuest - All rights reserved