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Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

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Page 1: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Farm Field Record Keeping

Jim Dunn

Agricultural Economist

Penn State University

Page 2: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Serbian crop farm

• 30 employees

• 6 bookkeepers

• 1,600 acres

• Social security

Page 3: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Introduction

• Important to determine the profitability of a crop or livestock enterprise

• Also used to evaluate new seed, decide when to take a dairy cow from the herd, and other decisions

Page 4: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Record Keeping

Good records contribute to good decisions.

Records reduce environmental risk. Decisions based on records are only as

good as the data. Records reduce environmental and legal

exposure.

Page 5: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Record Keeping (continued)

A record-keeping database: – Helps organize good data.– Provides an operation and maintenance

checklist. – Provides documentation of implemented

conservation practices.

Page 6: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

What Records Should be Kept?

Site information Production information Permits of certificates Manure field application Internal inspection data Mortality disposal

Page 7: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Crop production records

For each field

• What did you plant? Why?

• When did you plant?

• What seed?

• Did you get a soil test?

• What fertilizer did you apply? How much? What day?

Page 8: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Crop records (continued)

• Herbicide, insecticide, and fungicide applications– What product? When? How much?

• Other field work– Plowing, cultivating?

• Harvest activities

• What date? Total production? Quality? Problems?

Page 9: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Crop records (continued)

• How much time did each operation take?

• What did you pay for the purchased inputs?

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Using Records

• Evaluating seed

• Evaluating fields

• Evaluating chemicals

• Making crop choices

Page 16: Farm Field Record Keeping Jim Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

Software

• http://cdp.wisc.edu/crop_software.htm

• Lots of links out of date

• Carl Shaffer – data base – developed his own – What field – history – map –dates planted,

etc., variety – sprays, etc., yields, problems