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Should landowners help pay for cover crop expenses?

Education may be first step in getting landowner support for cover crops.

Tom Bechman 1, Editor, Indiana Prairie Farm

November 25, 2015

2 Min Read

Are cover crops a cost that you should incur alone as tenant on cash-rent farms if you choose to use them? Are you going to see more benefit than the landowner? If the landowner won't help pay for them, are they still worth doing?

Related: Know which cover crops you can plant late and which you can't

You will likely get answers all over the board on this one. There appears to be no set rules or standards for whether a landowner helps pay for cover crop expenses or not on cash rent land.

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Paul Marcellino and the Purdue University Extension Land Lease team believe it's a topic worth discussing in a state that leads the nation in cover corps by various parameters. He is the Extension educator in Howard County and a member of the team.

The first step may be education as to the benefits of cover crops. They're a key ingredient in improving soil health, which is a hot topic in Indiana. Barry Fisher, manager of regional soil health divisions for the Natural resources conservation Service, says the benefits are long-term, and result in increased organic matter over time. They also promote deeper rooting, and contribute to higher yields where farmers stay with no-till and cover crops over time, Fisher believes.

One farmer educated his landowner well. She knew he was no-tilling and using cover crops on her farm, and paying the total bill. He was doing it because he believed it helped his bottom line in the long run. She apparently realized it was also improving her farm.

Related: Cover crops may be a biological 'bug' killer

When she proposed raising his cash rent by $30 per acre, he finally told her he would do it, but he would drop out cover crops. That was the cost of cover crops for him, since he applied his own, and if he had to pay more rent, he couldn't afford the cover crops.

She immediately backed off and agreed to the same rent as the year before, assuming he would continue with the cover crops.

Thinking about a cover crop? Start with developing a plan. Download the FREE Cover Crops: Best Management Practices report today, and get the information you need to tailor a cover crop program to your needs.

About the Author(s)

Tom Bechman 1

Editor, Indiana Prairie Farm

Tom Bechman is an important cog in the Farm Progress machinery. In addition to serving as editor of Indiana Prairie Farmer, Tom is nationally known for his coverage of Midwest agronomy, conservation, no-till farming, farm management, farm safety, high-tech farming and personal property tax relief. His byline appears monthly in many of the 18 state and regional farm magazines published by Farm Progress.

"I consider it my responsibility and opportunity as a farm magazine editor to supply useful information that will help today's farm families survive and thrive," the veteran editor says.

Tom graduated from Whiteland (Ind.) High School, earned his B.S. in animal science and agricultural education from Purdue University in 1975 and an M.S. in dairy nutrition two years later. He first joined the magazine as a field editor in 1981 after four years as a vocational agriculture teacher.

Tom enjoys interacting with farm families, university specialists and industry leaders, gathering and sifting through loads of information available in agriculture today. "Whenever I find a new idea or a new thought that could either improve someone's life or their income, I consider it a personal challenge to discover how to present it in the most useful form, " he says.

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