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Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Pump and Haul Systems.

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Presentation on theme: "Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Pump and Haul Systems."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Pump and Haul Systems

2 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Remote Storage or Tankers can also be used.

3 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Umbilical Hose Application Systems

4 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Incorporation reduces odor and conserves nitrogen. Ammonia losses can be reduced from 10-30% to 1-5%

5 No-till Manure Injector Sweep-Style Manure Injector

6 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Sweep InjectorNo-Till Injector Soybean Stubble in SC, Coastal Plain. Applied at 10,000 gallons per hour.

7 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Calibration Liquid Manure Spreaders: n Spread at least one full load of waste, preferably in a square or rectangular field pattern for ease of measuring, with normal overlaps. n Measure the length and width of coverage, recognizing that the outer fringe areas of the coverage will receive much lighter applications than the overlapped areas.

8 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Liquid Application Systems n Advantages ä provide more transport mobility ä allow direct soil injection ä more flexibility ä can be less expensive n Disadvantages ä requires more time and labor than irrigation ä higher tractor HP requirement if injecting ä require improved travel roads and proper soil trafficability ä higher operating costs

9 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Pump and Haul Waste Management Systems n Loading areas are necessary to: ä protect equipment and operators ä avoid damaging the lagoon dike or embankment n Care should be taken to minimize spills during loading and transport. n Calibration is the combination of settings and travel speed needed to apply waste at a desired rate and to ensure uniform application. You must know the spreader capacity.

10 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Solids Application Common methods include : n Broadcast to surface n Broadcast/Incorp.

11 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Spreader Calibration: n Do you know the rate? ä Clemson Study n How about the spreader pattern?

12 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Calibration of Manure Spreaders n Applicators can apply manure, bedding, and wastewater at varying rates and patterns, depending on: ä forward travel and/or PTO speed ä gear box settings ä gate openings ä spread widths ä overlaps

13 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Application Uniformity Desirable PatternsUndesirable Patterns

14 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES n Best Management Practices are practices determined to be cost effective methods of preventing or reducing NPS pollution. n For waste management, they optimize nutrient uptake by plants and minimize nutrient impact on the environment. n A trained agronomist, soil scientist, or conservationist is best qualified to assess whether a specific BMP is appropriate for a given site.

15 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BMPs? Erosion is the number one source of nonpoint source pollution in Georgia. BMPs should include erosion control to reduce movement of soil and nutrients. Sediment is a pollutant, sediment carries nutrients, and loss of top soil reduces nutrient use by crop.

16 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BMPs in CNMPs n Table C1 in Template recognizes many BMPs and lists twelve specifically. n You may add any others you like. n 1) Tissue Analysis/Plant Sampling ä Good way to refine rate n 2) Injection or incorporation n 3) Manure Treatments like Alum

17 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program 4) Conservation/Reduced Tillage Reduces runoff and sediment losses

18 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BMPs 5) contour planting.

19 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program 6) Terraces or other water control structures

20 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BMPs 7) Vegetated Waterways/critical area plantings : grassed waterways can reduce nutrient movement to ditches, streams, and rivers.

21 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program 8) Diversions/ Downslope retention

22 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BMPs 9) Buffers Before After Buffers filter/treat: - sediment - nutrients - pathogens

23 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program 9)filter strips can reduce surface movement of nutrients into nonagricultural land.

24 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BMP: 10) Winter Cover/Scavenger Crops n Protect soil from erosion over winter n Crops scavenge residual nitrogen and phosphorus n May be good crop to graze. No-till planting into winter cover

25 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Crop Management  It is important to reduce application rates to account for cattle manure additions. BMPs 11) Rotational Grazing

26 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Windbreaks can reduce lagoon effluent and odor drift from land application sites. 12) Application Timing

27 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program BMPs? n Animals with access to surface water can be a direct source of pollution.

28 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Record keeping n Good records are essential: ä For regulations ä To protect yourself ä To improve over time n CNMPs are PLANS ä Records document actions n Monitor, Correct, Document n Computer record-keeping programs.

29 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Required Records n The following records must be available at the farm to satisfy the Environmental Protection Division: ä By rules or permit ä Individual permits may differ ä Retain for three years ä Record who and when sampled ä Amend CNMP with substantive changes

30 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Annual Checklist & Log n Manure storage not leaking n Manure spreading equipment/transport equipment okay. n Manure application according to plan ä Update CNMP ä Totals for field budgets n Annual Report will require manure generated, offsite transport, acres used and reported in NMP and any spills

31 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Other records from NPDES permit n Inspections, findings, and maintenance ä Semi-annual lagoon effluent (TKN&NO 3 ) and monitoring wells (TKN,NO 3, depth) ä Annual P and pH for each field ä Weekly lagoon and freeboard n Daily rainfall and land application events n Response to spills (posting # req’d)

32 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Lagoon Maintenance Inspections n When inspecting waste inlet pipes, recycling pipes, and overflow pipes, look for: ä separation of pipe joints ä cracks or breaks ä accumulation of minerals ä overall pipe condition n Record berm conditions and liquid levels

33 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Manure Application Records n Important notations: ä Date and time ä Field ID ä Source and quality ä Application rate and number of loads n For offsite situations record buyer, intended use, amount, and nutrient content. Also supply directions for use.

34 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Record Keeping (Other req) n Document employee training. n Spill reporting may require BOD, TSS, and amount of discharge- be prepared. n Closure must be reported within three months.

35 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Beneficial Records n The following records are not required but should be part of your CNMP: ä map of farm fields including waste application fields and acreage ä animal population ä crop yields and land application BMP’s ä water quality/ environmental assessments ä Calibration procedures and results

36 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Example Records for Liquid Manure Applications n IRR-1 : Lagoon liquid irrigation field record is to be used to record each irrigation event. n IRR-2 : Cumulative lagoon liquid irrigation field record is to record the total annual waste application to one field per crop cycle.

37 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Similar Records for Slurry and Solid Manure Applications n SLUR-1 and SLUR 2 : Liquid manure slurry field record is to be used to record each waste application event if the producer is using a slurry or pump and haul system. n SLD-1 & SLD-2 : Solid manure

38 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Example Irrigation Records Using IRR-1 and IRR-2: n Joe Pigford maintains a 3000 head feeder-to-finish operation. n Estimated volume of lagoon liquid generated annually is approximately 2.8 million gallons. n Waste analyses:  February 8, 1996  2.5 lb PAN/1000 gal  April 10, 1996  2.5 lb PAN/1000 gal

39 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Example Irrigation Records Using IRR-1 and IRR-2: n He irrigates two crops with wastewater using a traveling gun that applies 300 gpm.  Tract T1004: corn  traveling gun pulls are considered Fields 1 to 4, 6 acres each. He wants to apply 100 lbs of PAN/acre.  Tract T1005: bermuda hay  traveling gun pulls are considered Fields 5 and 6, which are 8 and 4 acres respectively. He wants to apply 300 lbs of PAN/acre.

40 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Example n Joe’s Lagoon Liquid Irrigation Field Record (Form IRR-1) follows. n Transfer the information for Fields 1 and 5 each onto a separate Form IRR-2. n Complete the calculations to determine whether Joe has met his nitrogen requirement for his corn crop and bermuda hay.

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45 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Review n Controlling Runoff and Erosion is important because sediment is a pollutant, it carries nutrients, and degrades top soil. n Always apply manure when crops can use it. n Manure with highest nutrient content should go to fields furthest away. n Minimum records should include application date, nutrient content, amount applied, field, and weather conditions.

46 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Review n When choosing application equipment, consider nutrient losses, operating costs, uniformity of application, odor, and time of application. n Calibration can determine application rate, uniformity, and overlap and lane spacing. n Application rate is just the amount applied divided by the area it was applied to. n Surface applications of manure generally result in higher nutrient losses.

47 Nutrient Management Planner Certification Program Review n Record keeping can prevent problems, document compliance and improve efficiency. n Suggested records include application logs, rainfall, animal populations, storage inspections, equipment maintenance, and water quality data. n Application records should include soil and manure tests, yields, application information and budgets. n Transport should include amount sold, buyer, and nutrient content.


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