Last fall I planted winter wheat and rye without any powered, mechanized equipment. This involved furrowing and seeding. Unfortunately, most studies of sewing density are for large fields worked by tractors. They also assume modern, dwarf wheat. Since I had none of these, I tried out various densities. I wrote it all up in a post last fall, which you can read here. This is a short post to update on the growth of these crops this spring.

Sewing Density

I tried a variety of densities, ranging from 8.5 to 85 lb/ac, as shown in the below figure.

Now that the wheat is over a foot high this spring, I can already see a difference in the densities. The sparsely sewn 8.5 lb/ac is not covering the ground densely enough to compete with weeds. Also, due to spotty germination, the wheat crop is patchy. The next greatest density (43 lb/ac) is looking very strong. It has the most even growth and coverage. The rows are clear enough that I was able to walk between the 8-in spacing with the furrow and knock down incipient weeds. The densest stand of 85 lb/ac doesn’t seem to be growing any denser than the rows sewn half as thickly. All of these rows were at 8-in spacing, which seems to work much better than the 16-in spacing of the next test. The wheat here does not grow dense enough to crowd out the weeds. Note how the rows with 43 lb/ac grow laterally more than the 85 lb/ac rows, outcompeting weeds a little better. This is due to tillering, discussed below.


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