© 2025
In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
KJJP-FM 105.7 FM serving Amarillo/Canyon and the central Texas Panhandle will be off the air on Monday from about 7am until 3pm. This shutdown is required while repairs are made to guy wires on the Channel 10 tower used by KJJP. During this outage you can continue listening to HPPR via its digital streams (see the player above) or through the HPPR mobile app.

No-till farmers can't understand why some still want to plow

wsj.com

No-till farming is a practice where plant material is left to shield the soil and to decay.  A process that produces valuable nutrients.  It also increases production and water content in soil, and requires fewer input costs says Scott Ravenkamp.  He’s a farmer from the eastern Colorado town of Hugo. 

This report comes from Kansas AgLand.

Lance Feikert no-till farms near Bucklin, Kansas, southeast of Dodge City.  He estimates only about one-fourth of the land around him is no-till.

Steve Swaffar is the executive director of No-till on the Plains—an organization dedicated to the farming method.  He says roughly one-third of Kansas cropland is no-till. 

But, why aren’t other farmers adopting the method that is water efficient and allows crops to thrive as conditions turn dry?

 “The hardest part is admitting what you’ve done your whole life could have been wrong.” says Ravenkamp.

“It’s a mindset,” Feikert says. “They’re used to the past, whatever they’ve been doing.”

The farmers both attended the 19th annual No-till on the Plains Winter Conference.  More than 900 farmers from the Midwest and around the world were in Salina, Kansas learning from experts how to transition to no-till or improve their current no-till practice.