1 / 27

Waste Utilization NRCS Standard 633

Waste Utilization NRCS Standard 633. Mark Scarpitti, CCA State Agronomist, Ohio NRCS (740) 653-1500 ext 40 mark.scarpitti@oh.usda.gov. Purposes of 633. Protect water quality Provide fertility for crop, forage, fiber production Improve or maintain soil structure

bpaquette
Download Presentation

Waste Utilization NRCS Standard 633

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Waste UtilizationNRCS Standard 633 Mark Scarpitti, CCA State Agronomist, Ohio NRCS (740) 653-1500 ext 40 mark.scarpitti@oh.usda.gov

  2. Purposes of633 • Protect water quality • Provide fertility for crop, forage, fiber production • Improve or maintain soil structure • Provide feedstock for livestock • Provide a source of energy

  3. Custom designed for the: • Type of Livestock Operation, • Type of waste, • Type of Waste Storage facility, • Soils, • Fields, • Spreading Equipment • Crop Nutrient needs, • Landscape • Environmental issues • Accounts for all sources of nutrient. Comprehensive Nutrient Management Plans

  4. Plans and Specifications • The CNMP is to account for utilization and disposal of all wastes produced and their application. • Utilization must meet the NRCS Standards for Nutrient Management and Waste Utilization. • CNMPs must be approved by a certified specialist.

  5. 633 CRITERIA – ALL PURPOSES • Use based on at least one manure test annually for all storage structures Hint to Applicators – take a sample for the client

  6. 633 CRITERIA – ALL PURPOSES • Soil Testing (pH, CEC, P, K) per Nutrient Management (590) • Application rates based on the most limiting: • Nutrients • Volume/Weight

  7. 633 CRITERIA – ALL PURPOSES • Document waste transferred and who will be responsible for acceptable use. • Records kept minimum of 5 years • Plan recognizes overall elements of conservation plan – SWAPA + H

  8. 633 CRITERIA – ALL PURPOSES PLANS SHALL SPECIFY • Form • Source • Amount • Timing • Method of application

  9. CRITERIA – WATER QUALITY • Wastes are not to be applied to land frequently flooded during the period when flooding is expected UNLESS incorporated immediately.

  10. CRITERIA – WATER QUALITY Fields that are “Systematically Surface Drained” (spaced 100-200 feet apart) • Till 3-5 Inches deep or use Aerway prior to “Liquid • Manure” application • Immediately incorporate “solid manure” • Or, Inject manure on fields that are “not tile drained” • Limit “Liquid Manure” applications to 13,000 gallons • or less

  11. CRITERIA – WATER QUALITY FROZEN / SNOW COVERED SOIL • Not Recommended • Target areas furthest from streams, ditches, waterways • Need 90% ground cover • Increase setbacks to minimum of 200’ from surface waters • Limit rate to 5000/gal/acre or 10 wet tons/acre • Limit to 20 contiguous acre – separate by 200 feet • Slopes over 6% - apply in alternate 60 – 200 foot strips

  12. Criteria forLiquid Manure Application On Fields With Tile Drainage • Problem - liquid manure moving through soil pores and cracks to tile - discharge • Problem with both injection and surface application

  13. CRITERIA – WATER QUALITY Liquid Manure … • Limit application to AWC in upper 8” AND monitor tile outlets during application • Application rate is to be adjusted to the most limiting factor to: • avoid ponding, • surface runoff, • subsurface drainage (tile) discharge, • nutrient needs of the field, or the nitrogen or phosphorus risks for the field

  14. CRITERIA – WATER QUALITY • Do not apply liquid manure at a rate that will create surface ponding or runoff. • When applying liquid manure to tiled fields have immediate access to tile plugs or equivalent safeguards

  15. CRITERIA – WATER QUALITY Fields that are Tile (Subsurface) Drained… • Apply the lesser of the AWC in the upper 8 inches or 13,000 gallons/acre per application. • Use an AERWAY tool or similar tool that can disrupt / close (using horizontal fracturing) the preferential flow paths … • If injection is used, inject only deep enough to cover the manure with soil. Till the soil at least 3 inches below the depth of injection prior to application, or all tile outlets from the application area are to be plugged prior to application

  16. Manure Application on Steep SitesCropland > 15% - Pasture > 20%Do one of the following... • Immediate incorporate unless > 80% ground cover. • Apply during period of low runoff (Late May to Mid-October). • Apply lower rates 10 tons solid or 5000 gallons liquid, separated by rainfall events. • The field is established in contour strips with alternate strips of sod.

  17. Where P2O5 Application Rates Exceed Crop Removal • Go slow to 150 ppm • At 150ppm -- No More • Determine the number of years to reach a Bray P1 of 150 ppm. • Use Table 3 in Practice 633 • Use the Purdue MMP Program

  18. Phosphorus Issues • Eutrophication ( dead zone ) • Critical issue in impaired fresh water • Outbreaks of harmful algae blooms • Decreased recreational & fishery value Agriculture is a MAJOR source of phosphorus in fresh water

  19. “P” Management • Soil Test • Customize feed rations • Disrupt surface P concentration (till) • Maintain high crop residue levels • Balance inputs & outputs • Draw P levels down

  20. OPERATION & MAINTENANCE • Records kept for 5 years or longer • Quantity • Dates, analysis, and amounts • Waste application methods • Crops grown and Yields • Calibration Records • Soil and weather conditions at application • Why -- C Y A !

  21. Duuhh Factors for CNMP writers !! • Manure has a reputation ! • It stinks MORE on hot humid days and holidays • Manure is a financial asset & liability • Liquids runs down hill • Tile systems are designed to drain water • Repair tile blowouts • Stay away from surface inlets • Stay away from water sources & conduits

  22. Watch CLOSELY the tile outlets when spreading • Use filter strips • Don’t spread when its wet • clean the roads up • Keep it in the ZONE – the root zone • Put it where it’s needed

  23. CNMP Biggies for Producers… • Do Manure tests • Balance application with need • Observe setbacks • Special attention for liquid manure • THINK nutrient application-utilization • Special attention to frozen snow covered soils • Special attention to steep slopes

  24. CNMP Good Neighbor Stuff • It STINKS! • No manure w/in 300 feet of homes, etc. • Early morning – cooler, less wind • Holidays • Manure may / does contain pathogens • Incorporate • Low aerosol application when irrigating • Perception is reality

  25. Mark A. Scarpitti • www.oh.nrcs.usda.gov • Phone: 740-653-1500 ext. 40 • Email: • mark.scarpitti@oh.usda.gov

More Related