Managing moisture with spring cropping

Gregor Heard
January 29 2018 - 3:00pm
Mark Jarvis with a forage rape crop. The plant's long tap root is ideal for drying out wet subsoils.
Mark Jarvis with a forage rape crop. The plant's long tap root is ideal for drying out wet subsoils.

FOR WOMBELANO, Victoria, farmer Mark Jarvis, spring and summer cropping presents a way of managing waterlogging risk.

Gregor Heard

Gregor Heard

National Grains Industry Reporter

Gregor Heard is ACM's national grains industry reporter, based in Horsham, Victoria. He has a wealth of knowledge surrounding the cropping sector through his 15 years in the role. Prior to that he was with the Fairfax network as a reporter with Stock & Land. Some of the major issues he has reported on during his time with the company include the deregulation of the export wheat market, the introduction of genetically modified crops and the fight to protect growers better from grain trader insolvencies. Still involved with the family farm he is passionate about rural Australia and its people and hopes to use his role to act as an advocate for those involved in the grain sector.

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