Long before the days of "climate-smart agriculture," farmer Dave Brandt was a no-till pioneer who reached stardom among his fellow farmers for his cropping practices and folksy way of explaining his 50-plus years of farming just outside of Carroll, Ohio.
Brandt, 76, died Sunday following an auto accident last Thursday in Illinois.
With his overalls, 6-foot long radishes, hairy vetch and sunflowers, Brandt spent his career farming with a strategy of building organic matter in his soil and paying as little for chemical inputs and tillage equipment as possible. In the age of social media, Brandt even became a meme with his photo and the quote, "It ain't much, but it's honest work."
Earlier this year, Brandt was honored by the group No-till on the Plains with its first "Legacy Award," which also was named after him.
In 2011, Brandt served as one of DTN's "View From the Cab" farmers. He noted then how much more there is to learn in agriculture about cover crops and what they can do to help yields while cutting back on chemicals.
"I think I must be the tip of the iceberg as far as learning to use cover crops to do what we want," Brandt said to DTN at the time.
A year later, when USDA's Natural Resources Service started a new soil health campaign, the agency launched it at Brandt's farm.
At the No-till on the Plains conference this year, Brandt spoke about his journey in farming, buying a farm in 1971 that had belonged to his grandfather. Brandt explained he turned to no-till agriculture because of soil erosion.
"It wasn't about regenerative agriculture or it wasn't about nutrient density or anything like that," he said." Our farm went from zero to 22% slopes and erosion was a big problem ... We were losing about 25 tons of soil per acre."
Brandt would joke about his early days with equipment. Long before there were 90-million acres of soybeans, Brandt recalled having John Deere engineers out on his farm trying to test the first planters that could plant soybeans.
"So, we're planting cover crops, learning all about them. After about 1,000 failures we had one or two successes. So, I've had all of the failures. You guys don't need to worry about it," he said.
Pointing to one of his photos with an old planter and muddy wheels, Brandt explained, "We grow cover crops to take the moisture out, not to keep it in, but the context is going to be the same."
Talking about tillage radishes, Brandt said he met fellow farmer Steve Groff who pitched him on the idea of tillage radishes. The next thing he knows, he's taking a photo holding one at the local soil and water office.
"I shouldn't be here today. I'm not a spokesman. I'm not a public speaker," Brandt said. "But I went into the local soil office and they took a picture of it. Somehow it got somewhere and the next thing I become the speaker all over the United States talking about tillage radishes."
Source: dtnpf.com
Photo Credit: pexels-adam-sonde
Categories: Ohio, General