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Growing Pulse Crops (Pulse Crops Working Group)

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Pub. DateTitleDuration
05 Apr 2023Aphids and Aphid-Transmitted Viruses00:28:18

Aphids are known for the destruction they can cause due to feeding damage. But they can also be responsible for transmitting harmful viruses into the crops. In this episode we hear from Dr. Lyndon Porter is a plant pathologist at USDA-ARS based in Prosser, Washington, Dr. Sean Prager is an associate professor of entomology at the University of Saskatchewan and Dr. Sanford Eigenbrode is a professor of entomology at the University of Idaho. There is a tremendous amount of collective knowledge in this group covering aphid-related topics including the development of genetic tolerance to the insect and resistance to the viruses.  We also discuss aphid sampling and hosts, chemical options for management and other integrated pest management strategies.

“We estimated a direct injury threshold, a level of aphid infestation that would justify a spray. And we had a second calculator that attempted to help growers who are concerned about the aphid as a vector of the virus, which is a different thing. In that case, we would say the nominal threshold is one aphid because it only takes an aphid that's prolific to feed for an hour and you have a sick plant.” - Dr. Sanford Eigenbrode

Lyndon says that giving growers real time data on aphid presence and aphid levels has been a critical step to helping with management of this pest and associated diseases. All three of our guests agree the long term goal is a combination of integrated pest management built upon a foundation of genetic tolerance to the pest and resistance to the diseases. This represents a really interesting area of research that combines entomology, pathology, plant breeding and several other areas of study. 

“If we can just get the associations between genetic elements and resistance, we can skip knowing exactly what those genes are coding for as long as we can track them into the breeding lines.” - Dr. Sanford Eigenbrode 

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Lyndon Porter, a plant pathologist at USDA-ARS based in Washington, Dr. Sean Prager, an associate professor of entomology at the University of Saskatchewan, and Dr. Sanford Eigenbrode, a professor of entomology at the University of Idaho
  • Explore the impact of aphids and the measures being taken to not only reduce the damage aphids cause by feeding but also reduce the impact of the viruses the aphids vector
  • Discover the factors contributing to aphid spread and the monitoring proving to be significant in managing their impact
  • Learn about the process towards developing genetic resistance to this pest and the tools being used to produce results quicker



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the

18 Jan 2022First Generation Farmer Nate Powell-Palm00:28:28

First generation farmer Nate Powell-Palm shares his inspiring story of starting his farming career at the age of 12 and adding pulses to his grain and livestock rotation. 

Nate is located near Bozeman Montana and currently farms organic pulse crops, oilseeds, cereals, and livestock. Beginning on his parent’s ten acres in 2004, Nate now farms around 1,000 acres spread across 12 different landlords. He also serves on the National Organic Standards Board and has been an organic inspector for about ten years where he has visited over 3,000 farms across 44 states.  

In this episode, we talk about his story of getting started in farming, what his organic production system looks like, how his picture ended up on the box of Annie’s Mac N Cheese, and what he has learned from others on his farming journey. 


“General Mills, owner of Annie's Mac N Cheese, developed a product saying we're going to make it with one-third yellow pea flour. And they said, Nate, you want to grow some yellow peas? And I'd never grown yellow peas, but I'm like, I'll try anything. And it just ended up being this super good fit for my region.” - Nate Powell-Palm


Nate has grown his operation and maintained it with an organic certification. He has found success in having a diverse production profile and that has included pulse crops. By incorporating pulses he has appreciated better soil health, improved soil fertility, better yields and an effective natural weed control. 


“What I've learned through not only farming, but organic farming especially, is diversity pays. And so if you're going to be at all a producer you'll want to have more than just one stream of income.” -Nate Powell-Palm


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

03 Mar 2022Integrated Pest Management of Lygus Bugs and Pea Leaf Weevil with Héctor Cárcamo, Ph.D.00:25:53

Dr. Héctor Cárcamo is a senior research scientist at the Lethbridge Research and Development Center in Alberta which is part of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. Hector’s work focuses on developing integrated pest management strategies for insect pests in crops such as faba beans, field peas, canola, and some forage crops. He helps growers develop management strategies and looks for ways to reduce reliance on chemistry. 

This episode focuses on two pulse crop pests in particular: lygus bugs and pea leaf weevils. We also talk more generally about biological control of insect pests including predators, parasites, and trap crops. Héctor shares that research suggests that some pests, if the populations are managed, can actually improve crop performance. 

“If you have a few insect pests on the crop, you actually can stimulate the plant because we have seen a bit of a response where you have a few insects on the plant and you actually get more yield compared to a plant that has no insects at all.” - Dr. Héctor Cárcamo

An overpopulation of pests will of course affect yield but also and sometimes more importantly it will affect quality and flavor. Héctor suggests that pests are meant to be managed not eliminated. A part from the benefit of the plants being stimulated, some of these insects provide a link in the food chain for other species useful in providing biodiversity. 

“My advice for growers in general is you have to be informed about the entomology, you know, the insects that are there and find out as much information as you can in terms of how you maximize the design of your farm.” -Dr. Héctor Cárcamo

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Héctor Cárcamo, a senior research scientist at the Lethbridge Research and Development Center in Alberta which is part of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
  • Discover the life cycle of  lygus bugs and pea leaf weevils that producers might face and different techniques used to manage their populations
  • Learn more by contacting Dr. Carcamo on Twitter @hectorcarabido


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



07 Jul 2020Canadian Pulses and Foliar Disease Management00:24:26

Canada has long been a leader in pulse crop production. A lot of what we know and use in the United States comes from their experiences and research. We are joined today by Dale Risula. Dale is the Provincial Specialist for pulse crops and other specialty crops with the Ministry of Agriculture based in Saskatchewan and he echoes the significance of crop rotation in pulses. 

“If you grow any one particular crop too frequently, then the pathogens tend to build out and that’s when they become a problem. So having a good rotation in place and keeping to it is something that can help alleviate that problem.” - Dale Risula


He highlights build up of pathogens and rotating crops presents a “major problem” in Saskatchewan. Dale hopes that new adaptive breeding efforts will allow for other crops such as chickpeas to be introduced to new areas creating longer rotations and more options for producers. The pathogens of concern include ascochyta, anthracnose, and chocolate spot among others.


“Every crop has their own ascochyta pathogen. So it's not as if it's all one beast and there is quite a bit of difference in how they behave. So you have to be aware of that.” - Dr. Sabine Banniza


Dr. Sabine Banniza is a Professor of Plant Pathology in the University of Saskatchewan’s Crop Development Center. She shares that differentiating these pathogens especially ascochyta and anthracnose can be difficult. Fortunately for producers, some of the treatments are the same. Dr. Banniza recommends scouting fields early on to prevent a “major epidemic.” Fungicide application is best performed at the 8 to 9 node stage to allow for best penetration of the plant canopy. However, presence of a foliar disease does not automatically indicate a treatment is needed. 


“One of the challenges of these diseases is that we simply can’t count and determine a threshold like we would maybe for an insect pest or a weed.” - Dr. Sabine Banniza


Because of this, recommendations can sound more “wishy washy” according to Dr. Banniza. The presence of disease is not enough indication for intervention. The Fungicide Decision Support Checklist can help producers determine the need for intervention with fungicides. By working through this list, factors such as crop history, weather forecast and canopy density can be evaluated and a risk assessment produced. Dr. Banniza also highlights that infected seed can inoculate fields with these pathogens creating a high pathogen burden from the onset of crop development. There are tolerable amounts of infection that will likely not affect the crop but each crop has different rates of tolerance. Dr. Banniza recommends evaluating risk factors to allow for more targeted fungicide use and hopefully reduce the fungicide resistance that appears to be developing. 


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:


  • Meet Dale Risula, the Provincial Specialist for pulse crops and other specialty crops with the Ministry of Agriculture
  • Learn about pulse crop production in Saskatchewan
  • Also meet Dr. Sabine Banniza, Professor of Plant Pathology in the University of Saskatchewan’s Crop Development Center
  • Discover different foliar diseases and the different methods used to assess their risk and need for intervention

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



13 Apr 2021Testing for Soil Pathogens and Rhizobia With Alan McKay, Ph.D.00:20:47

Dr. Alan McKay joins us all the way from Australia, to talk about some exciting work they are doing to measure various soil microbes including pathogens and beneficial rhizobia. 

Dr McKay is the Leader of the Soil Biology and Molecular Diagnostics group at the South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI). He is committed to not only studying soil-borne diseases and other aspects of soil biology, but also developing tools for growers to manage this biology in their operations. He has played a major role in the development of the PREDICTA® B soil analysis technology, which is now recognised internationally for its capacity to accurately identify and measure soil pathogens, as well as the nutrition status of soils. We’re going to talk a lot more about this technology in today’s episode.

“The thing we’re doing now with the PREDICTA® B technology is starting to look at some of the beneficial organisms. So rhizobium for pulses...which is the rhizobia that modulate lentils, field pea and fava bean. Then using that we launched it as a provisional service just in South Australia and Victoria this year to identify paddocks where you don't need to inoculate the pulse crop. In Australia, the growers don't like applying their innoculates to the pulse crops. Most reliable methods have to be done just before seeding them and it's a task they prefer not to do. So we think this is going to work pretty well.” - Dr. Alan McKay


After sampling 850 paddocks they have identified 400 species to allow his group to map the growth of pathogens across the country. One unexpected discovery was that prior to this survey it was assumed there was one Phytophthora species with the potential for causing major harm to pulse crops. Now they have identified three separate species and can better isolate their locality and the tools to better identify them. At the moment, they are focusing on identifying more common pathogens going forward that, while not as catastrophic as Phtyophtora, can reduce yield by up to 20% and are therefore also significant.


PREDICTA® B is a collection of what we call qPCR tests.” Dr McKay remarks that it is easy to quality control, scalable and offers great insight for growers and researchers alike. Currently the majority of their testing has focused on cereal crops but they are readily expanding into pulse crops.


“The potential now with pulses is that we could look at packaging tests for key pathogens and the rhizobium and identify whether a paddock is a good option for that crop and whether you need to inoculate.” - Dr. McKay


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

07 Aug 2024Seed Certification With Steve Sebesta00:30:29

At the time of this interview, Steve Sebesta was the director of the Foundation Seed Program at North Dakota State University and the Deputy Commissioner of the North Dakota State Seed Department. Steve has since retired from these positions, so we were very lucky to capture his years of experience and expertise in this area before his retirement. In this episode, Steve discusses the critical role of the foundation seedstocks program, how the plant variety protection act works and why seed needs to be certified.

“North Dakota is a little unique compared to most other states in that we have a county seed increase program. So when a new variety is released and we have foundation seed available, the counties decide whether or not they want to produce seed in their county of that new variety. And if they do, then their county grower, who is typically an experienced grower, will produce seed essentially for the county. It's not his seed. He doesn't have ownership of it. It's for the county seed grower. So it's a really good way to increase the amount of seed available of a brand new variety very quickly.” - Steve Sebesta


Germination success, variety identification and weed presence contribute to the certification of seed that allows for the label required for selling seed in North Dakota. North Dakota has the largest seed certification agency in the country, with between 250,000 and 300,000 acres of seed production every year. Of that, field peas is their third largest crop, with over 21,000 acres in 2023. 


“A lot of the public varieties were funded by government programs, federal government programs. And so they needed a way to try to incentivize investment in research and development and production of new varieties. So they implemented the Plant Variety Protection Act which gives the variety owner the exclusive authority to determine who can and cannot produce seed of their product and market that seed. So there are a lot of infringements that are possible on a PVP variety that people need to be aware of.”  - Steve Sebesta


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Steve Sebesta who recently retired as the director of the Foundation Seed Program at North Dakota State University and the Deputy Commissioner of the North Dakota State Seed Department
  • Discover the function, purpose and process of the Foundation Seed Program as well as the requirements that must be met for seed to be labeled as certified


Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



17 May 2022Intercroppping and Organic Variety Development with Steve Zwinger00:21:50

Steve Zwinger joins the show to talk about variety development, intercropping, and organic pulse production. Steve is a research specialist in agronomy at NDSU Carrington Research Extension Center. One of his primary responsibilities is research into organic production, and pulse crops are an important part of these rotations. Steve has been involved in this type of research since the 1990s, and works with a number of crops, including small grains, pulses, and some work in ancient grains as well. You’re going to hear about what he’s discovering in his intercropping research, the benefits he sees in organic variety development for both organic and conventional growers, and the importance of seeding rates.

For those that might be new to intercropping, we’ve done some episodes on the topic in episode three of this season as well as last season episode six and an intercropping panel bonus episode. Steve says research has shown other benefits as well, such as disease suppression in a chickpea/flax intercrop. Disease resilience could be a reason to do further research into intercropping, but it also guides Steve’s work in breeding organic varieties in general.


“So basically intercropping is really looked at as a practice of growing two or more crops together in the field at the same time. And basically what we're doing is we're looking for combinations of plants that will compliment each other better than when they're planted alone. This can lead to increased yield and increased quality…. I thought it seemed to make sense from a number of standpoints, maybe it might have a fit in organic. And that's why I started looking at some of that.” - Steve Zwinger


He sees benefits of organic variety development not just for certified organic producers, but for conventional farmers as well. This concept of developing varieties in an organic system is an interesting one. As we think about trying to develop more resilient varieties that can prevail in less than ideal conditions, there’s a real argument to be made that more varieties should be developed this way. Overall one theme that definitely runs through a lot of Steve's work is this idea of building resilience, building it into varieties, but also just building it into agricultural systems.


“The variety choice is the easiest decision that can be made that's going to have the biggest impact for the farmer. So variety development is really important and I can't stress it enough. Where we really, really need to go for the future is developing varieties specifically for organic agriculture…Having those types of genetics is very important for all agriculture, of course, but particularly when your tools are limited by the amount of inputs that you can use.” - Steve Zwinger


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Steve Zwinger, a research specialist in agronomy at NDSU Carrington Research Extension Center.
  • Explore the value of intercropping and the research Steve is involved in to determine this methods...
14 Sep 2022A Perennial Pulse Crop with Brandon Schlautman of The Land Institute00:24:51

PLEASE COMPLETE THE LISTENER SURVEY: https://bit.ly/Pulses2022

The Land Institute’s Brandon Schlautman joins the show about the work he is doing to breed perennial pulses. Brandon is the lead scientist of the perennial legumes program at the Land Institute which is based in Salina, KS. The 40 year old non-profit ag research institute tries to find solutions that balance short term economic realities with long term conservation goals. They’re known for their work in kernza, and hope to make similar progress in pulses. In this episode we talk about why developing a perennial pulse crop is worthwhile, where they started down this road, how they settled on sainfoin for the perennial pulse development, and the road ahead towards commercialization.

“My program at The Land Institute focuses on perennial pulses and we're exploring various candidates and are starting to work towards something that can kind of mimic a pea or a chickpea or a lentil, but be something that has living roots in the ground year round, and gonna make it through our winters and recover and always be there. It's kind of a plant once and harvest many times type of deal.” -Brandon Schlautman

So when Brandon arrived at The Land Institute, one of his early challenges was to find the most promising perennial legumes to consider for commercial development. This open ended task was the first step to narrowing it down to a plant he could work with. He eventually settled on sainfoin. One big plus about sainfoin, is that it actually is already grown in some areas as a commercial crop. But settling on sainfoin is just one of the many challenges of bringing this new crop to production. The hope is this will find a premium market, reduce soil disturbance, and thrive on minimal inputs. 

“There are a couple thousand acres of production in the western part of the US. And I really like that there's a sainfoin seed industry already. We've talked with multiple growers in Montana that they grow and clean seed and sell it to other producers mostly for forage production. So we have some of this knowledge about how sainfoin can be grown and how to do the seed production. The eating it is the next step and so we're excited.” - Brandon Schautman

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Brandon Schautman the lead scientist of the perennial legumes program at the Land Institute 
  • Explore the journey towards developing and producing a perineal pulse crop
  • Discover the benefits of having a perennial crop and the possible opportunities sainfoin can offer producers
  • Learn more at www.landinstitute.org

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.


05 Mar 2024Weed Seed Destruction Technology with Dr. Breanne Tidemann00:34:40

Dr. Breanne Tidemann is a research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada based in Lacombe, Alberta. As a weed scientist, her job is to explore new and novel ways to manage weeds. Her focus is to research applied management strategies, weed biology and ecology, and screening for herbicide resistance. In this episode, Tidemann discusses the work she has been leading in Canada on the effectiveness of weed seed destruction technology including the use of mills and shares that this approach can be a very helpful tool in the toolbox especially in pulses.

“By and large, on the vast majority of weed species that have been tested in Canada and the United States, we're seeing greater than 95% control of what goes into those mills…There's the odd one here or there that's a little bit lower, but when I say it's a little bit lower, we're typically still talking greater than 80% control.” - Dr. Breanne Tidemann

Tideman shares the concern that at the end of the season the remaining weeds have managed to survive everything the farmer has put them through. They are therefore the fittest weeds that are the most difficult to get rid of. She proposes that rather than spreading those weed seeds all over the field with a combine we need to focus on destroying them. This process may not solve any weed problems for the crop you're harvesting, but it does start the weed management for the next year early and can have real impacts on future production. 

“So there's six main methods of harvest weed seed control. Some of them are things we would consider using in North America, like the weed seed destruction technology.…it's basically trying to turn the combine from a weed seed spreader into a weed seed predator” - Dr. Breanne Tidemann

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Breanne Tidemann a research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada based in Lacombe, Alberta
  • Explore the value and purpose of research regarding harvest weed seed control especially as it relates to crops with limited herbicide options such as pulse crops
  • Discover current methods and equipment that are effective for harvest weed seed control and are available in North America


Connect with Dr. Tidemann on Twitter @breannetidemann or visit her website here.



Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



10 Jun 2021Coordinated Research Efforts to Fight Pulse Pathogens with Dr. Jenny Davidson00:23:04

In this episode we meet Dr. Jenny Davidson, a pulse pathologist at South Australian Research Institute, or SARDI, in Adelaide, South Australia. Dr. Davidson works on diseases of lentils, chickpeas, field peas, and fava beans. She leads a team of a number of scientists and technicians working to keep pulse diseases under control in Australia. In 25 years of doing this work with pulse crops, she has seen diseases and genetic resistance to those diseases come and go. She shares about efforts to combat these pulse diseases, especially ascochyta, and the unified effort in Australia to find effective ways to manage them. 

“We started out and still do really have a big focus on ascochyta because each of these crops have their own version of ascochyta blight. And in a rain fed growing system, this has a major impact on the crops.” - Dr. Jenny Davidson

Dr. Davidson shares that chickpeas became popular in Australia in the 1990’s. The varieties used were susceptible to ascochyta blight leading to the loss of whole crops. The industry only began to grow again once resistant varieties were used. Unfortunately, some of those varieties that had demonstrated resistance for 10 years began showing susceptibility.  Producers are now having to use multiple fungicide spray applications and consider the additional costs in order to make up for this adaptation. 

“What the Australian researchers have done in investigating the pathology of ascochyta rabiei in chickpeas is looking at the population variability of that pathogen, because obviously if you put out resistant types, you’re then putting a selection pressure on the pathogen to create types that can overcome that resistance. So we need to understand what the pathogen is doing.” - Dr. Jenny Davidson

Dr. Davidson’s research has identified that the ascochyta they are facing in chickpeas only reproduces in Australia asexually. Generally this leads to a reduction in the pathogens ability to adapt to resistant varieties but somehow the ascochyta has overcome this and made itself very difficult to manage for producers. The programs to investigate this are coordinated around Australia and the world to isolate the genetic sequences responsible for susceptibility and resistance.  

“What we're hoping is that the resistance that we can get into adapted backgrounds then is handed over to the national breeding programs to get it into something that farmers will really want to grow. So it's a complete “beginning to end” program to try and cover off on the whole thing” - Dr. Jenny Davidson

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Jenny Davidson, a pulse pathologist at South Australian Research Institute, or SARDI, in Adelaide, South Australia
  • Explore the efforts being made to manage pulse crop diseases in Australia and the obstacles researchers are working to overcome
  • Discover what the research focus is to establish ascochyta management on both a national and international basis

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



20 Feb 2024Bringing Pulse Crop Growers Together With Sam Arnson and Shannon Berndt of the Northern Pulse Growers Association00:26:32

Farmer and Northern Pulse Growers Association president Sam Arnson and executive director Shannon Berndt join us to talk about their work at NPGA, the importance of bringing the industry together to fund research, marketing and education efforts, and how other pulse growers can get involved. They share what NPGA has accomplished and what the future holds for northern pulse growers in the region.

“This is an exciting time to be part of this industry because we are still a fairly small industry, but we're growing. We're seeing a lot of additional states coming on board with acreage and production that face some of the same challenges that North Dakota and Montana producers face. And so as a collective group of growers, I think it's important that y'all have a voice.” - Shannon Berndt


The Northern Pulse Growers Association is a nonprofit association representing dry pea, lentil, chickpea, lupin and fava bean growers from Montana and North Dakota. Shannon Berndt has been serving as the assocation's executive director since 2007. When not acting as president for NPGA Sam is found farming northwest of Williston, North Dakota.


“People are overall excited next year for pulses to be put into their rotation if their rotation allows it. And I mean by that is their crop rotation and or chemical herbicide usage if it's opened for pulses. I think a lot of acres are gonna go in next year.” - Sam Arnson


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet farmer and Northern Pulse Growers Association president Sam Arnson and executive director Shannon Berndt
  • Explore the progress in development and collaboration between producers the organization has accomplished for pulse growers in the northern region
  • Discover what future opportunities the NPGA feels pulse growers have available to them as the industry grows and expands



Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast


12 Jan 2021[Bonus] Equipment Considerations for Growing Pulses00:45:10

Paul Kanning led our panel on “Making Your Farm Equipment Work for you.” Paul is the MPCC Vice Chair as well as a producer from Flaxville, Montana. He was joined by Lowell Harris, a service manager at Torgerson’s LLC, Phil Moodie, a store manager for Front Line Ag, James Neumon, a service manager from Hoven Equipment Company and Mike Kjos, a store manager for C & B Operations. Needless to say, with a panel like this you are going to hear great insight into what the industry standard is for equipment use and management with pulse crops.

The first topic of discussion was air seeders and what steps need to be taken to prevent seed coat damage during the seeding process. There was general consensus that slowing down to 1- 1 1/2 per hour to give a pulse producer the best chances of success. James highlights the need for gentle handling and special considerations including a rubber pad to the top of the seed tower to create more cushion for the seeds. While the additional pad is not a factory option it has been gaining traction by word of mouth for better protection of the seed.  Both Lowell and James recommend a well managed and controlled airspeed. Lowell also offered picking specific augers and meter rolls to compliment the other practices. Both Mike and Phil agreed that  using the largest sized tooth sprocket in the meter housing as an additional course of action can add further protection. In addition, consistent ground speed and secondary towers can create a greater seeding consistency. 

Paul moved on to roller techniques that producers can use to embed rocks. Ensuring good soil conditions such as with a little moisture will make the roller more effective. Also, using your roller as soon after drilling can give you the best results. 

With the amount of investment and time spent on sprayers in pulse operations, maintenance is a very important part of a sprayers management. Mike discussed changing hub oil regularly and although its time consuming he recommends doing it yearly. James added rinsing off the sprayer after use to avoid rust and damage to the machine. Lowell agreed with the previous recommendations and added greasing the moving parts to keep them in the best working condition. Phil added monitoring the hydraulic lines and the drive line throughout the machine to avoid a fluid transfusion. 

Some producers are still using swathers rather than applying a desiccant. Phil admits to not having many producers using this technique but suggests managing the flow pressure and the guard angle to make sure it is getting down as low as you can. James added adjusting the draper speed to make sure the crop lays easiest for pick up. 

James recommends adjusting the flotation of the header to the optimal height being crucial during harvest.  He also recommends paying attention to your guard angle and is very pleased with the technology involved in the flex drapers for pulse growers. Mike reiterated adjusting the flotation of the header to the optimal height. To keep with the theme throughout this panel, Mike highlighted the need for slow and steady progress in the field while operating a draper header. Lowell details different techniques to insure the flotation of the header is properly adjusted. 

Phil explains different additions for air reel options on flex drapers. The Crary is his preference if you are working a large amount of acres with pulses. Mike agrees that an air reel will pay for itself in the long run for pulse growers especially with a lentil crop. Lowell suggests also exploring a Macdon reel and that producers he has worked with have at times preferred them. James admits he doesn’t have many if any customers using an air reel at this time. He did say many of his producers are finding success with the Macdon reel. 

Lowell offers that “with any discussion about combine settings, everybody’s got a different opinion and most of...

27 Jul 2023Soil Health with Abbey Wick, Ph.D.00:24:56

At the time of this interview Dr. Abbey Wick was the associate professor and extension soil health specialist at North Dakota State University. She has since gone on to a new role after nearly 12 years at NDSU. She is now the Global Soil Health Education Program Lead at Syngenta. We talk about what is motivating more farmers to want to try new practices on their farms to improve their soil health, some of the barriers to adopting these practices, and the support and resources available for anyone looking to learn more. We also discuss a new approach that food companies are getting involved with to spread the word about soil health through certified crop advisors, which is called the Trusted Advisor Partnership.

“I do think that people need to be aware of how they're going to keep that residue on the surface and probably it's with the crops they are growing in between those pulse crops and rotation. They could build up some of the residue. But yeah, it's exciting. I think there's a ton of potential with pulse crops, and fortunately we can grow them here in the northern plains. So I think we're in a great position here to do some really cool things with soil health and pulse.” - Dr. Abbey Wick

Wick has seen both soil erosion and salinity issues be big motivators for producers to turn to new soil health practices. Using a perennial and keeping residue on the surface has become much more common place for producers in the North Dakota area to combat these issues. She goes on to share that a strong community of support and collaboration has developed around these soil health practices including the Trusted Advisor Partnership. 

“There's a community around this that I think growers want to be part of. And to have that support not only from the university or from crop advisors who are interested in this or from conservation districts or NRCS groups. But they want to be part of that community because they want to be creative and they want to be thinking through the problems and solving problems on their farm and now they have people to do that with. And so I think that's been a huge motivator for soil health.” - Dr Abbey Wick

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



16 Jul 2024Pea Processing and Pulse Ingredients with Nicole Atchison of PURIS00:37:34

Nicole Atchison is the CEO of PURIS Holdings, a vertically-integrated plant-based food company that operates from field to fork in primarily yellow peas. Nicole leads the agriculture side of the business, including contracting with growers, seed development and breeding, and innovation in product development. Her brother Tyler leads the ingredient side of the business. PURIS operates throughout the entire supply chain from developing genetics to developing new markets. 

“So if you're making a high protein cereal, you need a different pea protein than if you're making a plant-based beverage, which is still using a pea protein. But those two pea proteins are slightly different. And that's really the innovation that we do on our processing side, is we create these different proteins with different functionalities so that they can work in these different applications.”  - Nicole Atchison

Atchison describes the wet protein processing they are using that provides a unique protein stream with a lot of potential for furthering plant-based protein production. She sees potential for pulse proteins in providing protein sources for both consumer beverages and medical nutrition. As they ramp up production, PURIS Holdings is also active in ongoing efforts to regulate the impact of foreign pulse crop processing and imports affecting both global and domestic markets.

“I'm a huge advocate for pulse based ingredients because I do think that as much as we want and encourage people to have and eat whole pulses, that's not where the American consumer is today. We like convenient foods, packaged and processed. That's where our market is. And so we need to be able to drive these crops into those channels as well and that's why processing is so critical to the market.” - Nicole Atchison

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Nicole Atchison is the CEO of PURIS Holdings
  • Discover the journey PURIS Holdings has taken to develop plant-based proteins and their initial introduction to pulse crops
  • Explore the global ingredient market for pulses and the operations of processing pulse crops


Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



07 Aug 2023Pulse Flours and Ingredients with Eric Bartsch of AGT Foods00:28:40

Eric Bartsch is the division head for global food ingredients at AGT Foods based in Bismarck, North Dakota. He’s been with the company for 16 years and through that time they have grown from just a couple factories to now over 45 facilities and $2B in sales. Processing peas, lentils, chickpeas, fava beans and dry edible beans has been their primary focus since they were founded in 2002. While they have ventured into some grain-based products since that time, they still remain focused and bullish on the future of pulse crops.

“There's a lot of things that we've had to establish. Protein checking in peas was non-existent 20 years ago. And now it's where we're checking protein on every load to be able to supply some of the high end markets that we are today. You know a lot of major investments in protein manufacturing plants, in processing, in food manufacturing plants that are incorporating pulses is really at an all time high and continues to grow.” - Eric Bartsch


Eric discusses how much has changed in pulses to make them more attractive to a wider variety of consumers who want tasty and nutritious foods. This has had big impacts on what buyers are looking for from these pulse crops in terms of flavor and functionality. He talks about how that information gets passed from the consumer to the producer and back, and the role AGT Foods plays in facilitating that connection. He also talks about some of the opportunities ahead for the industry, and why he is more optimistic than ever about the market potential for these crops. 


“That's really one of the initiatives we took when we built our Minot plant, is how do we transform pulses into ingredients that can be incorporated into everyday food. So now you look at the market and there's all kinds of gluten-free pasta made from lentils, chickpeas, and peas. They’ve become mainstream where it's become a very large market…So there's many ways to where we've taken pulses, transformed them into an ingredient and incorporated them into everyday foods that consumers are familiar with” - Eric Bartsch


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Eric Bartsch, the division head for global food ingredients at AGT Foods based in Bismarck, North Dakota
  • Explore the future of the pulse crop industry from the perspective of a pulse crop processor


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

17 Mar 2021Integrated Weed Management with Dr. Tim Seipel00:24:39

Dr. Tim Seipel joins us to talk about integrated weed management. Tim is a Cropland Weed Extension Specialist at Montana State University. In this episode, he’ll talk about the threat of weed resistance, how to think about weed management strategies, and some of the tactics they are working on to combat some of the most threatening weeds to pulse crops. 

“Integrated weed management is an approach to managing weeds where you combine multiple control tactics. Each one of those control tactics is not a silver bullet of success where all the weeds are gone, but when you end up putting together these tactics, you get better weed management outcomes..” - Tim Seipel, Ph.D.


Due to weed resistance there is rarely one method that will appropriately control weed growth. Mechanical, chemical and some biological management techniques are all different methods that when used in combination may be a more effective form of weed management that is far less likely to promote resistance. Dr. Seipel shares that the overall goal is to be “unpredictable” to the weed population to keep them from having a reliable weed management pressure that will result in selection of resistance. 


“It worries me a little bit, that we put a lot of emphasis on these group 14 herbicides to really control that herbicide resistant glyphosate because further to our east and the midwest, they really do have resistance to group 14 herbicides…. Keep that in the back of your head and always think of different ways to control that marestail.” - Tim Seipel, Ph.D.


Dr. Seipel suggests an “on-farm experimentation process and figuring out what’s right for the producer and when you might have those time periods.” Focusing on diverse rotations, rotation goals for that specific operation and timing for most effective control will help producers understand where integrated weed management could provide the most benefit.


“Really what we should think about doing is pushing weed communities in directions where we want them to be so they have the minimum impact on our crops. So it's a strategy, tactic thing, more than a prescriptive plan that someone could give.” - Tim Seipel, Ph.D.


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Tim Seipel, a Cropland Weed Extension Specialist at Montana State University
  • Explore the many tactics involved in integrative weed management and the benefits they provide
  • Discover the importance of being “unpredictable” to weed populations to slow the resistance processes and propagation 


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



24 Mar 2020What's Happening in Pulse Crops?00:19:37

Welcome to Growing Pulse Crops Podcast! In our first episode we speak with Tim McGreevy, CEO of the American Pulse Association. Tim explains how pulse crops became a priority in the farm bill and what federal funds has helped them to accomplish. The Pulse Crop initiative expanded research in nutrition data for these crops as well as the benefits to the cropping system. 

Pulse crops play an integral role in “supporting sustainable agricultural systems around the world.” This has led to recognition and designation of 2016 being the international year of pulses by the United Nations. The US and Canada, top competitors in the industry, joined forces to take advantage of this opportunity and promote awareness for pulse crops. This effort has led to “exciting product innovation in plant based foods.”


“We (pulses) are in beverages, we’re in baked goods, we’re in pastas, we’re in deserts. We are in everything now and it’s growing.” - Tim McGreevy


Despite this recognition and promotion, the industry as a hole has faced more recent obstacles. Trade tariffs have resulted in some varieties, especially peas, lentils and chickpeas, to be priced below the cost of production. Another set back involved a recent announcement from the FDA suggesting a correlation between grain-free pet foods using pulse crops as substitutes for conventional grains and dilated cardiomyopathy in dogs. The research to verify the causation of diet induced dilated cardiomyopathy in dogs is ongoing but unfortunately consumer confusion has led to a fall in demand of these crops by pet food companies.


Despite these difficulties, McGreevy see’s a bright future ahead for the pulse crop industry. Recent annual research reviews highlight the techniques to “raise high quality disease free products” that put nitrogen back into the soil. They also suggest product innovation to fit these crops better into mainstream food supplies and will hopefully lead the way to an expansion of their available market. 


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:


  • Meet Tim McGreevy, CEO of the American Pulse Association
  • Explore the benefits of pulse crops in todays agricultural landscape
  • Learn about the collaborations and successes made by the Pulse Crop Industry
  • Hear about the difficulties faced by the industry in recent years 
  • Discover the actions taken to overcome these issues and the bright future ahead for pulse crops


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



30 Jul 2021Pulse Genetics with Rebecca McGee, Ph.D.00:24:36

In today’s episode we talk about what’s being developed in terms of pulse varieties for pest and disease resistance, winter hardiness for fall-sown pulses, and what it takes to bring new varieties to the market. Rebecca McGee, Ph.D. joins us to discuss her work on developing varieties of spring-sown peas and lentils, autumn-sown peas, lentils and chickpeas. Dr. McGee is a research geneticist (aka plant breeder) with the USDA-ARS Grain Legume Genetics and Physiology Research Unit located at Washington State University in Pullman, WA. She has worked for the USDA-ARS since 2009, and before that time she spent 13 years with General Mills as a vegetable pea breeder. 

Dr. McGee says one of the things she loves most about her job is developing varieties that are unique, nutritious for the consumer, and well-suited for the environment that the farmers will be growing them in. This last part includes developing resistance to pests and diseases.


“The mission of the ARS is to help America's farmers and the way I can do that is to develop varieties that they can reliably grow year in and year out, regardless of what disease and pest issues they face.” - Rebecca McGee, Ph.D. 


She does want to be clear that developing the varieties is just one part of the complicated process of getting new varieties to farmers to grow. It’s of the utmost importance to have communication from everyone involved, especially when it comes to farmers offering feedback on the genetics they’re needing.


“The concept of it takes a village to raise a child, really applies to plant breeding too. It takes a village to create a new (plant) variety. As breeders, we know the genetics, but we rely on plant pathologists, on agronomists, on soil scientists, and a whole range of other scientists to help us in the development process.” - Rebecca McGee, Ph.D.


Producers play a role in her efforts by helping to identify what obstacles and yield limiting traits they are facing. “If it becomes apparent that the stakeholders need resistance to a new disease, it's relatively easy to go to the germplasm collection and search the collection for accessions that are resistant to the disease.” The process only begins with a need from the producer.


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Rebecca McGee, a research geneticist (aka plant breeder) with the USDA-ARS Grain Legume Genetics and Physiology Research Unit located at Washington State University in Pullman, WA
  • Explore the many steps involved in creating and producing new varieties of crops for producers
  • Discover the goals and efforts made by plant breeders on behalf of producers



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



19 Mar 2024Nitrogen Fixation and Field Pea Production in South Dakota with Dr. Christopher Graham00:26:04

Dr. Chris Graham is an associate professor at South Dakota State University. He’s also the manager of the West River Research Farm near Sturgis, South Dakota. At that facility they focus a lot on regenerative agriculture, including doing a lot of work with peas and other pulses to extend crop rotations in that semi-arid region in the western part of the state. Graham shares about pulse production in South Dakota, focusing mostly on field peas. He also shares some of the complexities of nitrogen fixation, including what it might look like to have farm-specific microbial inoculant mixes in the future. 

“When you look at the growth of wheat, generally the yield is set first and then the protein is made later in its life cycle. And so we often see peas, obviously they're harvested and they start to decay, and that slow decay releases nitrogen  later in the wheat growing season. And so we often see a protein bump with wheat following peas.” - Dr. Chris Graham

While there isn’t a lot of acreage in pulses in South Dakota yet, Graham calls field peas the “nickel slots” of the pulses. In other words, a great place to start incorporating them into a rotation with a low barrier to entry. He highlights that your soil nitrogen content will likely not increase but your input needs may decrease when pulses are used.

“It's still nitrogen that you didn't have to apply and it's also nitrogen that the plant did not necessarily take up from the soil. And so it's conserving some of that nitrogen that's being made available just on that baseline level.  ” - Dr. Chris Graham

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Chris Graham, an associate professor at South Dakota State University and the manager of the West River Research Farm near Sturgis, South Dakota
  • Explore the potential use of pulse crops in rotations in South Dakota
  • Discover the niche pulses can fill in rotation as a broadleaf crop capable of nitrogen fixation

Visit Dr. Graham’s webpage here.

Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

09 Apr 2024The Fight Against Resistant Weeds With Dr. Brian Jenks00:28:56

Dr. Brian Jenks is a weed scientist at North Dakota State University based in Minot. He has been in this role since 1997 and over that time he has seen an alarming rise in resistance to many of our herbicides from certain weeds, especially in kochia. In this episode Jenks discusses the resistance problem and some of the work underway to help farmers manage these weeds that are getting tougher every year to control. He also shares an exciting new offering from the Ag Genotyping Center to identify resistance.

“I've been polling farmers this winter and the most common answer I get is about 80%. Farmers think about 80% of their kochia is roundup resistant. So it's a majority of the kochia and we know that there's group 14 resistance out there to Aim and Sharpen. So if we want to control kochia in a burn down, we need to know  if Aim and Sharpen are going to work for us.” - Dr. Brian Jenks

Spray droplet size, travel speed when spraying and the height of the kochia when treated are all factors that greatly affect the success of herbicide use. True resistance however will be able to survive each of these adjustments. Developing new mechanisms of action and products to circumvent the resistance is a lengthy difficult process with no clear immediate solution in site. With resistance observed in many commonly used herbicides, gramoxone seems to be the only one that remains consistently effective. Unfortunately resistance is likely to emerge here too without other measures being taken.

“The worst thing we can do is probably a two year rotation where we're using the same herbicides and the same crops over and over.  I'm optimistic if we can diversify our crops to get a minimum of 3, 4, 5 crops in the rotation,  and then use 5, 6, 7 different modes of action with our herbicides.” - Dr. Brian Jenks

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Brian Jenks, a weed scientist at North Dakota State University
  • Explore the growing problem of herbicide resistant kochia and the impact this problem will have on pulse crop production
  • Understand the significance of different spray techniques and following up on spray treatments with early season monitoring

Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast


11 Apr 2022Specialty Markets and Sustainability with Chris Wiegert of Healthy Food Ingredients00:22:51

Chris Wiegert joins the show to talk about his unique role in the pulse crops industry. As both the chief business development officer and chief sustainability officer of Healthy Food Ingredients, Chris has a great sense of various pulse markets and the ins and outs of maximizing value from these crops. Based in Watertown, South Dakota, Chris and his team at Healthy Food Ingredients contract organic, identity preserved and other specialty pulse, small grain, and oil seed crops. 

“All of our facilities are food grade, so we're primarily in that food space, but we're in the middle. We're taking that product from the farmer, we're putting it into whatever form that end-user wants it in and then we're sending it to the end user to make the final food typically.” - Chris Wiegert


Chris discusses what customers are demanding when it comes to pulses including allergen free, identity preserved, and other specialty markets. We also talk about the importance of sustainability to consumers and food companies. This is an area of agriculture that is becoming more and more data-driven, and one that is important for everyone who works with pulse crops to understand. 


It's really a specialty market because you're probably trying to hit a spec, whatever that is, or we're looking for zero toxins or zero heavy metals or something like that. It's a specialty market all the way through, even if you don't consider the crop a specialty crop.” - Chris Wiegert


A big part of that specialty market that has really emerged in recent years is allergen free products. When you’re talking about something as important and as specialized as allergen free, Chris says the entire process from farm to consumer needs to be aligned. Ensuring this type of allergen-free designation takes a lot of communication with growers. As does another type of speciality market: identity-preserved or IP. It seems incredibly tedious to know exactly where every shipment of pulses comes from. Chris says they’re not necessarily tracing it back for potential problems, but for potential opportunities. Having this information provides them with the opportunity to market the farming practices to the consumers.


“Our real niche is working with a customer based on what they feel is important and let's see if we can get all the way to the farm to help it.” - Chris Wiegert


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Chris Wiegert, the chief business development officer and chief sustainability officer of Healthy Food Ingredients
  • Explore the systems and approaches HFI takes to provide the best products for their customers
  • Discover the new marketing opportunities they are able to provide producers by identifying their farming practices, unique ingredient characteristics and sustainability efforts.

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



23 Jun 2023Grasshopper Management with Agronomist Jeannie Rude00:29:39

Jeannie Rude is an agronomist at PRO Co-op in Northeast Montana. She manages part of the co-op’s business to help growers make decisions, solve agronomic problems, and provide inputs. Overall, Rude works with 13 different crops on an annual basis. She is acutely aware of how much her job and the success of her cooperative hinges on the viability of the farmer customers that they serve. 

“I love what I do because of the complexity. It definitely makes it more challenging. It makes it hard to bring new people into the business because they have to learn so much and it's not something that's in a textbook… I would not do this if it was routine and if it was something that was easy to copy.” - Jeannie Rude

In 2021 Rude discovered that there was limited research on grasshoppers due to the cyclical nature of their impact. She had to make some educated guesses for her clients in order to manage the grasshopper population explosion. Rude discusses grasshopper population thresholds, life cycles, management options and what environmental factors will affect their survival most. 

“There's a hundred species of grasshoppers between you in South Idaho and me and Northeast Montana. There are five that are pests and two that are giving us trouble right now in this area, so there's 98 that don't matter. So there's a ton of grasshoppers in the environment that are harmless….There's a threshold for action and all of those other grasshoppers, they're not part of your action threshold you're looking for.” - Jeannie Rude

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Jeannie Rude, an agronomist at PRO Co-op in Northeast Montana
  • Discover the path Rude has taken to becoming the resident expert on grasshoppers for her area
  • Explore what options are available to producers to manage grasshoppers and what weather conditions affect their populations most



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



19 Jul 2022Intercropping on the Farm with Greg Busch00:20:23

In this episode we continue our conversation with Greg Busch, a farmer in the far northwest corner of North Dakota. In case you missed Greg’s introduction, he farms with his wife Jessica and they’ve been growing pulses as part of their rotation for over thirty years. We talk about what led Greg to try intercropping, which combinations have worked for him, the benefits and challenges of this approach, and his advice for others who might want to experiment with intercropping.  

“I was thinking I was going to still see the same root rot that we had seen five or 10 years before, but that didn't happen. It just seemed like the two grew together and they formed a really good synergy. In the areas that are a little more saline prone, where peas do very poorly, the canola was thicker. In the areas on hilltops, where the canola tends to run out of moisture, the peas did better. The combination far exceeded what we would've gotten with peas alone.” - Greg Busch

Greg continues to adjust his protocols as needed. One priority has been to even out the maturity of the crops to maximize their harvest. He mentions there is an added cost in cleaning and separating the crops he harvests but is hopeful he may someday find a market that will accept the mix. Initially there were concerns that the moisture content in the peas would be too much for the canola while storing the two together but Greg was surprised to find that that wasn’t the case. 

“They store very nicely together…. We were quite concerned that we were gonna have moldy canola when we opened the bin door, but that just wasn't the case. In fact, we let that combination sit in the bin for a year and a half till we got around to cleaning it. And trust me, I was checking it because I was concerned. I didn't want to burn up a bin of combined grain, but when we cleaned it a year and a half later, it came out just as nice as when we put it in. So it's amazing that they do store that way.” - Greg Busch

Greg initially incorporated intercropping to feed “the soil microbes and the different soil life that is out there.” He has also experienced an overall price reduction in production costs by reducing input needs. 

“When it comes to chemical, you have these two crops competing with each other and shading out most of the other weeds that are out there. And we're seeing a reduction in weeds and a reduction in the need for additional chemical.” - Greg Busch

Greg continues to make adjustments as needed based on market prices, water availability and input costs.

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Continue our conversation with Greg Busch, a farmer up in the far northwest corner of North Dakota
  • Discover his journey into intercropping and the results he has enjoyed
  • Explore the trials and lessons he has learned by adding intercropping to his rotation



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



01 Jul 2024The Importance of Genetic Diversity With Eric von Wettberg, Ph.D.00:34:21

Dr. Eric von Wettberg is a professor at the University of Vermont and the director of the Vermont Agriculture Experiment Station. His research program focuses on understanding crop domestication as a means to harness the diversity of crop wild relatives to breed crops with improved climate resilience and stress tolerance. In this episode we discuss Von Wettberg’s work in pulses, his adventures in germplasm collection, the challenges and opportunities of maintaining genetic diversity, and the importance of protecting crop wild relatives. 

“We're never fully done with collecting germplasm because there might be more out there and those plants are in a natural habitat. That habitat is not static, so they may be changing over time. There's diseases in some natural populations and disease resistance can actually evolve. So we need to be collecting germplasm continually, and we should even have preserves or parks that hold crop wild relatives. To let them evolve so that we can let evolution generate more resistant varieties for us.”  - Dr. Eric von Wettberg

Von Wettberg shares his concern with the loss of genetic variation in crops, particularly pulses, as a result of human cultivation and selection. A lack of genetic variation reduces resilience of these crops to expected effects of climate change such as drought and disease. In his research group, they are using a new collection of the wild relatives of chickpea to restore genetic variation to cultivated chickpea, and to better understand the genetic basis of flowering time and drought tolerance. 

“Any mutation, whether it's a new mutation or an old mutation, is helpful. But by collecting, we're more likely to find the old mutations… By looking in wild populations, there's just been more time for those mutations to occur, which makes them a helpful place to look.” - Dr. Eric von Wettberg

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Eric von Wettberg is a professor at the University of Vermont and the director of the Vermont Agriculture Experiment Station
  • Explore the impact the loss of genetic variation can have on crop varieties and what is being done to mitigate that risk


Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



10 May 2023Lentil Agronomics with Perry Miller, Ph.D.00:23:46

Dr. Perry Miller is a cropping systems scientist in the Land Resources and Environmental Sciences Dept at Montana State University. A large portion of the work Dr. Miller does includes working with pulse crops and how they can make other crops, namely wheat, grow better. Part one of this episode was published as episode two in this season and focused on crop diversification and fertility. In this episode, we focus on lentil agronomics. As more and more farmers started to grow lentils in their rotation instead of summer fallow, Perry says the early lessons about growing the crops included being mindful of herbicide carryover and applying an inoculant.

So you need to know what your soil residual herbicide history is because there are some persistent herbicides, and lentil tends to be a little bit the canary in the coal mine when it comes to herbicide residues. If you've got something in the soil, lentils will usually respond to it…The other easiest mistake to make is to not apply a rhizobial inoculant in a way that actually gets that bacteria in a living fashion onto the seed or into the soil in a way that can interact with lentils to help with fixed nitrogen.” - Dr. Perry Miller

Perry says that most producers are familiar enough with pulse crops to avoid those common pitfalls and that most are now focusing on optimizing their operation. One interesting area that he has been exploring is rolling timing and its impact on yield. Perry mentioned that even in their trials where there was flat ground and very little rocks, rolling still seemed to be beneficial to yield. Perry has also looked at five different seeding rates and found out the recommended seeding rate, in a lot of cases, was probably not enough. 

“Long story short, 1.5 x seeding rate was the economic optimum by the time you considered additional seed cost and what the yield response was. So it suggests that we're probably leaving some yield potential on the table by going at our old, traditional recommended seeding rates.” - Dr. Perry Miller

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Follow up with Dr. Perry Miller, a cropping systems scientist in the Land Resources and Environmental Sciences Dept at Montana State University. 
  • Explore the many farming practices Perry has studied and explored to optimize the productivity of pulse crops


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



05 Jan 2021[Bonus] Domestic & International Pulse Markets with Tim McGreevy00:12:31

**Register for the Northern Pulse Growers Association Annual Convention happening virtually January 19-21: https://www.northernpulse.com/events/conventions/

Today's episode was recorded live at the NPGA Montana Pulse Day Virtual Event in November. USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council CEO Tim McGreevy gave a presentation on domestic and international pulse markets, then opened the floor for some Q&A moderated by NPGA President Chris Westergard. 

Videos from Tim's presentation can be found on the USA Dry Pea and Lentil's Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/USADPLC

Thank you to the Northern Pulse Growers Association for sponsoring!


12 May 2020Pulse Crop Fertility00:24:43

Mark Schmidt, a North Dakota Farmer, joins us to share the steps he is taking to improve the fertility of his pulse crops. Dr. Dave Franzen from the NDSU extension also chimes in to share what current research and recommendations are available for pulse growers. 

Mark discusses his thought process in working through what crops to plant this season especially in the current global climate that is “just unlike any other year that I’ve farmed.” His persistent battle with root rot has led to planting more rotations as a form of mitigation. He now grows “two or three different crops in between (his) pulse crops.” Like many, Mark mentions that ongoing research and recommendations can at times seem like they contradict previous recommendations making it difficult to always know the best course of action. We visit with Dr. Dave Franzen to provide some direction with pulse crop fertility.


“Inoculation with proper inoculant is just really important….So that’s a big thing in the area where the pulse crops are grown.” - Dr. Dave Franzen


According to Dr. Franzen, Potassium, Phosphorus and Sulfur are not needed in large quantities in the North Dakota area. Monitoring the type of soil you have is much more beneficial than trying to assess these levels as you can predict what is needed. He typically suggests a small amount of Phosphorus and soluble Sulfur if the soil type suggests it.  Potassium is rarely needed and Nitrogen only required depending on the crop. “In the absence of any diagnosis, putting a little bit on is probably not a bad plan,” says Dr. Dave Franzen. Micronutrients like “Zinc, Manganese, Iron, Molybdenum” are generally of little concern in his experience and not worth the added expense. 


“We are having an emerging problem with acid pH in the west where most of these pulse crops are grown in long term, no till in particular.” - Dr Dave Franzen


Acidity is observed from the bacterial process when “ammonia goes to nitrate.” A lot of crops cannot be successful in an acidic environment and will require an additive to help neutralize the pH. The sugar beet industry and municipal drinking water facilities produce a byproduct that can serve to neutralize the pH but is difficult to transport and spread. With limited limestone sources, using these byproducts may become more significant and a higher priority if the pH continues to drop. 


Dr. Franzen also helps us understand the calculation and use of Nitrogen credit. Pulse crops provide opportunity for nitrogen fixing bacteria to replenish nitrogen stores in the soil. The credit represents the “nitrogen that we know is going to be available probably in the first month or two after the next crop is planted.” Unfortunately this value is not represented in any soil tests so a calculation based on a store of data and the type of crop previously used is referenced. “Credit is something that you don’t see in the soil test but you know is going to happen.”


“The (Nitrogen credit) doesn’t come because it’s released in the nodules. It doesn’t come because it’s released in the residue. It comes because the residue is not tying up as much Nitrogen as what other choice crops might be.” - Dr. Dave Franzen


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:


  • Meet Mark Schmidt, a pulse crop farmer in North Dakota
  • Hear about the difficulty he has in determining the best planting practices for his pulse crop rotations
  • Also meet Dr. Dave Franzen an NDSU Extension Soil Specialist 
  • Explore the significance of different micronutrients in regards to pulse growers and their effects on fertility in pulses
  • Learn about the Nitrogen Credit and how it is calculated


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is...

16 Aug 2024Adding Pulse Crops Into Diverse Rotations With Kim Saueressig00:26:36

Kim Sauressig is a fourth generation farmer in Central North Dakota where he grows a wide range of crops including corn, wheat, durum, barley, soybeans, lentils, chickpeas and pinto beans. He also raised cattle until a few years ago when they decided to focus exclusively on crops. When not farming, Kim chairs the North Dakota Dry Pea & Lentil Council and has a seat on the USA Dry Pea & Lentil Council where he serves as the chair of the research committee. Kim shares his journey into pulse crops, what roles they play in his overall rotations, the value of associations like the USA Dry Pea & Lentil Council, and why he believes more farmers should consider including pulse crops in their crop rotations. 

“So we started seeding pintos and we were putting a little bit of “N” down. My agronomist called me and he got our soil test back from the laboratory and he is like, just drop your fertilizer. He said, “You don't have to put anything down.” And I truthfully, honestly think that that's because the lentils from the two years previous had fixated it in there. We didn't need it anymore.” - Kim Sauressig


Kim highlights the many benefits of pulse crops that he has experienced including their nitrogen fixation capabilities and their efficiency with water use. Through his work on the North Dakota Dry Pea and Lentil Council and the USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council he has expanded his personal network to include many agronomists and research scientists that have really helped him not only fine tune his operation but also support future pulse crop growers. He goes on to share the many advantages the councils offers producers by way of research and financial support.


“Your revenue protections and your crop insurances and stuff, that's kind of directly put together by the US Dry Pea and Lentil Council….They were a dog in the fight that helped get dollars to come back into the specialty crop side of things. I mean we're talking millions and millions of dollars that went back to producers that were growing pulse crops that were very, very beneficial.”  - Kim Sauressig


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Kim Sauressig, a fourth generation farmer in Central North Dakota, chair of the North Dakota Dry Pea & Lentil Council and chair of the research committee on the USA Dry Pea & Lentil Council
  • Discover Kim’s experiences with pulse crops and the insights he has gained from participating in both the North Dakota Dry Pea and Lentil Council and the USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council



Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



31 Mar 2020Pre-Plant Herbicide Applications00:20:28

Meet Ryan Ellis, a farmer from North Dakota. Ryan shares how he is preparing for the upcoming season. Dr. Brian Jenks, a weed scientist from the North Dakota State University, also joins us to discuss pre-plant options to control weeds in pulse crops.

Ryan Ellis farms about 5,000 acres with his father. They currently grow peas, lentils, soybeans, flax and forages. Ryan shares that growing pulse crops requires a lot of forethought and planning. There are not many post-emergent herbicide options that can be used with in-crop applications. Any chemical residue from the year before will also affect the potential of the next year's crop if a residue persists. 

“I generally plan out at least a rough idea of what I’m growing the following year based on what I spray the previous year.” - Ryan Ellis


Dr. Jenks shares that one great thing about pulse crop farmers in battling the weed populations is that they tend to have pretty diverse rotations. By varying planting dates, herbicide applications and harvest dates we avoid selecting for resistant varieties and traits of weeds. This system provides enough “diversity in the rotation and in the practices (which) helps to combat weeds.”


“The good thing about pulse growers is that most of them already have a good rotation or they’re working toward a good rotation...They typically have maybe even three or four or more crops in their rotation and that's a good thing.” - Dr. Brian Jenks


Both Ryan and Dr Jenks suggest a fall application of herbicide to better control the most common weed they face, Kochia. By applying in the fall and also the spring they are able to be more precise with their spraying and gain better control over time. Again, there are not many post-emergent herbicide options available for pulse crops, so being more aggressive earlier sets the farmer up for better success.


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Ryan Ellis, a North Dakota pulse crop farmer, and Dr. Brian Jenks, a Weed Scientist at North Dakota State University
  • Discover the importance of planning ahead when farming pulse crops
  • Learn different techniques for managing weed populations when herbicide use may be limited


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

06 Oct 2020Fall Weed Control with Dr. Joe Ikley00:26:52

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Dr. Joe Ikley is an Extension Weed Specialist at North Dakota State University and joins us to explain why fall weed control is crucial to best crop management. His extension responsibilities there include weed control on all row crops except for sugar beets and potatoes. 

“We do just want to emphasize as many ways as we can that these weeds will be easier to control this fall than they will be in the spring…. Taking advantage of these weeds that are up now and killing them off before they go into winter is one of the best things we can do to prepare us for 2021.” - Dr. Joe Ikley

“Horseweed was one of the first weeds, the first weed in the US, to start taking advantage of overuse or over-reliance on glyphosate.” In crops like corn or soybeans we are able to apply a second herbicide in the spring if needed but with pulse crops that is not an option. This makes identifying and treating the weed when it germinates in the fall vital to maintaining weed control into the spring for pulse growers. Despite glyphosate resistance, Dr. Ikley still sees value in its use.

“Pulse crops have much longer rotation restrictions with the herbicides that we apply. But there’s still several that we can use in the fall that are pretty effective on the weeds that we’re dealing with. So for those grasses that we’re dealing with, its still going to be glyphosate.” - Dr. Joe Ikley

He goes on to suggest different additions, such as 2,4-D or Valor, that you can add to your fall spraying that will help to manage resistant weeds.  Dr. Ikley has seen as much as 90% control of kochia in the spring by treatment with Valor in the fall. He does recommend careful reading of labels to make sure any additions or herbicides used comply with producers plans for any pulse crop planting.

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Joe Ikley an Extension Weed Specialist at North Dakota State University
  • Explore the effects of fall weed control on spring weed control programs
  • Learn what protocols are available for pulse crop application and what new research is coming out that will be of benefit  


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



03 Aug 2022Aphids and Grasshoppers with Tyler Wist, Ph.D.00:23:19

In this episode Dr. Tyler Wist discusses the impact caused by grasshoppers and aphids in pulse crops. Tyler is a field crop entomologist with Agriculture and Agrifood Canada based at the Saskatoon Research and Development Center. He does research on field crop insects to find ways to better protect crops, establish economic thresholds, and identify and understand plant-insect interactions. He starts the conversation with personal insights in grasshoppers.

“The real trouble is when grasshoppers get into a flowering crop. You can have a beautiful green lentil crop and they'll move in and they'll just clip the flower off….If it drops its flowers, you get no pods, then you get no yield. So the grasshoppers like to clip those flowers off, especially in lentils. So our threshold that we use up here in Canada is actually really low.” - Dr. Tyler Wist


With this potential for yield loss, it is important to understand exactly where that threshold should be. Another pest that causes substantial damage in pulse crops is the aphid. Tyler says they started using the cumulative aphid density to identify thresholds and found out that the economic threshold actually comes before the economic injury level. While counting aphids might sound tedious to some, rigorous scouting is of the utmost importance during the susceptible period. 


“If you're not careful with aphids at the flowering stage of your fava bean plants, you could lose your whole crop.” - Dr. Tyler Wist


There are so many dynamics at play here including the biology of the insect, field conditions, overwintering, and timing. Tyler said all of this research he is involved in comes together to provide the most accurate economic thresholds possible. Along with continual monitoring, introducing beneficial insects can be an important part of an effective integrated pest management program. Tyler says Field Heroes have a great website with resources for learning more about beneficial insects.


“We're doing the science for you and those economic thresholds are there to help you save money, to know when you don't need to apply insecticides.” - Dr. Tyler Wist



This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Tyler Wist, a field crop entomologist with Agriculture and Agrifood Canada based at the Saskatoon Research and Development Center. 
  • Explore the effects of grasshoppers and aphids in pulse crops
  • Discover the economic thresholds, research and resources available to producers to better mitigate insect pests


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.





17 Mar 2022Weed Management for Field Peas and Dry Beans [War Against Weeds Crossover]00:26:10

In this episode we have the opportunity to listen to an interview recorded for the War Against Weeds podcast. Co-hosts Dr. Sarah Lancaster and Dr. Joe Ikley are both weed scientists: Sarah at Kansas State University and Joe at North Dakota State. Together they help listeners understand what it takes for farmers to fight the war against weeds. Joining Sarah and Joe on today’s episode are Dr. Lucas Haag, the Northwest Area Agronomist for Kansas State University, and Jeanne Falk Jones, a trained weed scientist and multi-county agronomist for Kansas State University extension also based in Northwest Kansas. 

In the interview, Sarah, Joe, Lucas, and Jeanne talk mostly about field peas and dry beans, including the growth of these crops in Kansas, and what’s working when it comes to weed management. Stay tuned to the end of the episode for a really interesting conversation on herbicide carryover. 

“Dry beans are a really good alternative especially and primarily when we're looking at them on irrigated ground…And so they're a really good rotation crop, especially when we have a lot of irrigated corn. We have water needs at a little bit of a different time and they've seemed to be a little more economically viable for those versus just solely irrigated corn.” - Jeanne Falk Jones

She goes on to compare the use and benefits of dry beans rather than the more familiar soybeans. A strong thriving market, more Kansas soil tolerance and less susceptibility to fungus are some of the advantages dry beans have. Lucas adds that pulse crops have the added ability as cover crops to help solve one of the biggest obstacles for Kansas farmers, water efficiency.

“Everything in this part of the world is about how do we get the biggest economic return out of water? And it doesn't matter whether it's precipitation or coming on through a pivot…We're only about 20% efficient at storing that rainfall we get during a fallow period. So what if we can take that 80% that we would lose to evaporation anyways and turn that into something marketable like field peas.” -Dr. Lucas Haag

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet  Dr. Sarah Lancaster and Dr. Joe Ikley weed scientists and co-hosts of the War Against Weeds podcast.
  • Discover Kansas field peas and weed management in pulse crops with Dr. Lucas Haag, the Northwest Area Agronomist for Kansas State University, and Jeanne Falk Jones, a trained weed scientist and multi-county agronomist for Kansas State University extension
  • Explore the benefits of pulse crops being added
17 Feb 2022Intercropping and Organic Pulses with Clair Keene, Ph.D.00:22:18

Dr. Clair Keene joins us to talk about both intercropping and incorporating pulses into an organic rotation. At the time of our interview, Clair was the extension specialist in cropping systems at the Williston Research Extension Center where she supported farmers directly as well as conducted research and extension outreach with county agents and other stakeholders. Since that time her title has changed to assistant professor and agronomist at North Dakota State University, but her research interests remain in crop rotation, weed management, cover crops, soil health, organic agriculture, and perennial forages. 

We’re going to talk about the intercropping work Clair has participated in as well as some of her efforts to help farmers that want to transition to organic systems in the state. Clair does a great job of blending the agronomic and economic considerations in this episode. 

“Farmers that have grown chickpea with flax, say that they don't see as much ascochyta in their fields. They don't need to spray as often. So they see it as a really important disease management tool. And so I wanted to do the small plot work. Let's see if we can ideally try to figure out why, why does it work?” - Dr. Clair Keene


Intercropping is the act of growing two different crops that are generally planted and harvested at the same time. We’ve discussed it on a few different episodes in the past, including episode 10 of season one with Lana Shaw, episode 6 of season two with Tony Wagner, and in a special intercropping bonus episode. Intercropping provides benefits such as disease suppression, dry down, and harvestability in some cases. As with everything, it’s going to be very dependent on your situation, but Clair does see potential with the chickpea/flax and the canola/pea intercrop combinations specifically. 


“If we can reduce the need for fungicide use, reduce the number of fungicide applications, that's probably the fastest way to reduce chickpea cost of production or at least that I'm aware of.” - Dr. Clair Keene


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Clair Keene assistant professor and agronomist at North Dakota State University
  • Explore her research involving intercropping with pulse crops and best practices for disease management and ease of harvest
  • Discover additional considerations with regard to organic production



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

21 Jul 2020Intercropping00:24:11

Can intercropping pulses with other crops help with problems like disease pressure? That's what we explore on this episode.

Farmer driven research at the Southeast Research Farm in Saskatchewan is a non-profit gift to farmers. Lana Shaw is the Research Manager there and has become the resident expert on intercropping specifically with flax and chickpeas.


“Adding a small amount of flax to chickpeas, we’ve found in small plot trials and farmer fields and in producer surveys, that it reduces the leaf disease, the ascochyta. ” - Lana Shaw


This would be an adjunctive measure to the routine rotations and seed treatments already employed by pulse farmers. An added benefit Lana has also found is that intercropping also increases the chickpea quality and helps to avoid loss of yield with necessary color sorting. Of course the battle with ascochyta is a perpetual fight for pulse crop growers and the potential for better control is very exciting. 


“What the surveys have found was that the farmers were getting less disease with one application on intercrops than the farmers that were spraying twice on their monocrop.” - Lana Shaw


Lana finds that the “knowledge gap” for intercropping is a greater obstacle than any financial burden imposed by the flax. Using different seed at different rates and harvesting different crops at the same time present some challenges for equipment management.  If intercropping is used there are modifications used during harvest to accommodate both crops. Lana refers you to farmers who have accomplished harvesting for the exact adjustments that need to be made. 


Dr. Michelle Hubbard is a Pulse Pathologist at Agriculture and AgriFood Canada corroborates Lana’s findings. It’s possible the flax has been so successful in limiting ascochyta by limiting the moisture levels in the canopy making it more difficult for the fungi to grow as quickly. The other possibility is that the flax represents a physical barrier reducing the amount of spread between the chickpea plants. Another hypothesis is that more diversity alongside the chickpea plants results in activating a defense mechanism for the plants. Essentially, research is ongoing as to what is directly causing the benefit but it is widely accepted that it helps regardless of the mechanism of action.


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:


  • Meet Lana Shaw and discover the exciting findings her research has proven in regards to ascochyta 
  • Explore the advantages and pitfalls to intercropping and how both can be best managed
  • Meet Dr. Michelle Hubbard who confirms Lana’s findings and also explains they running hypothesis as to the mechanism causing the success
  • Dr. Hubbard also shares current research being taken to evaluate anthracnose and its potential treatments


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



30 Mar 2021International Demand for Pulses00:31:38

We have a great discussion for you featuring Jeff Rumney, Vice President of Marketing at the USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council, Johanna Stobbs, who works to promote U.S. pulses in the European market, and Raul Caballero who represents U.S. pulses in Mexico and throughout Latin America.  US Pulses are widely recognized and preferred in the global marketplace with lots of opportunity for growth going forward. In this episode we discuss what has driven demand for pulses traditionally in these areas, as well as the innovation that will help drive demand even further in the future.

“(Europe) is a demanding market and the trends are all towards pulse eating. The overwriting demand is for quality. And the great thing about US peas, lentils and chickpeas is that we deliver quality consistently year after year. And that's what makes the European market so dynamic for us.” - Johanna Stobbs


Johanna has seen an increase in pulse crop consumption due to the health benefits and more at home cooking with the global pandemic. Johanna also comments that there has been a lot of innovation in regards to using these products in different processed foods and the consumers are enjoying that as well. Raul goes on to explain the many benefits promoted in latin america where basic nutritional needs especially regarding protein can be cost prohibitive and represent a real concern for the general population.


“So nowadays you see all of these governments within the (latin american) region doing a lot of efforts to promote pulses. And also the population is looking at those new opportunities. And I think the most exciting part of it is that because of all this trend we're looking at new ways of preparing things.” -Raul Caballero


One of the pulse crops that has found more recent success in latin america are lentils. Varieties and quality from the US have become more popular and much more competitive globally. Johanna mentioned that Scandinavian countries, especially in regards to organically raised products, have seen an increase in pulse crop consumption. 


“A lot of times (consumers) don't really understand or are worried about the underlying technology when they go to the market and buy products. They're first looking for taste, they're looking for convenience, and then they're looking for health. Will their family eat it? Is their family going to be healthy? Pulses and pulse ingredients really fit into that consumer mindset of what's going to make my family happy.” - Jeff Rumney


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

01 Feb 2022Pulses, Cover Crops and Cattle with Miranda Meehan, Ph.D.00:22:54

Dr. Miranda Meehan is the Livestock Environmental Stewardship Specialist with North Dakota State University Extension. Her work primarily deals with grazing management and the balance between our environment and our livestock. 

In this episode we talk about making rotations of livestock and pulse crops work. Specifically, we’ll cover the role of pulses in full season cover crops, the considerations of incorporating cattle into crop rotations, and we’ll also get into some of the biggest questions about cattle and crops like compaction, stocking rates and forage quality. 

“I think the most common thing we see people do in starting with cover crops is those winter cereals because that's an easy way to get into it and it doesn't interrupt our cropping system much.… That's a really good source for grazing, getting animals out for a little earlier grazing than we would if we had to wait for pastures to be ready.” - Dr. Miranda Meehan

Dr. Meehan suggests basing your cover crop selections on your overall goals for production. Different factors such as grazing, haying, and cost of seed can all affect that decision. In addition to watching costs and nutritional balance, timing is also very important. For example,  in a frost situation legumes will lose their quality, but brassicas will be able to maintain. But, she says pulses, peas in particular, can be a great fit in full season cover crop mixes. 

“In terms of our pulses, I think the best fit in a grazing situation is our field or forage peas. They are very affordable. They're under 50 cents a pound. And so, if we don't have something established, you don't feel bad about it. You're not out a lot and that lowers that risk.…..It's a cool season. It starts growth nice and early. We actually have seen regrowth on it when we graze it.” -Dr. Miranda Meehan

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Dr. Miranda Meehan is the Livestock Environmental Stewardship Specialist with North Dakota State University Extension.
  • Discover the benefits pulses can offer to grazing operations
  • Explore the different options and considerations for full season cover crops



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



08 Jan 2021[Bonus] Intercropping Panel00:37:12

Dr. Mike Ostlie hosts a panel discussing the potential and process for intercropping with pulse crops. Dr. Ostlie is a research agronomist at NDSU Carrington REC. He leads us through a discussion with Justin Jacobs a Research Specialist at NDSU Williston REC,

Dr. Chengci Chen a Cropping Systems Agronomist and Superintendent of the Montana State University Eastern Ag Research Center and Karl Mavencamp a farmer from Malta, Montana. 

The concept of having two crops growing in the same space requires a balance of inputs, resources and management to create a system that produces an overall increase in total yield per acre. 

 

Let’s meet our panel! Justin Jacobs joins us to share his research at NDSU Williston. His recent focus has been on field peas and canola and developing the most advantageous management. He has also explored different protocols such as mixed row and alternate row planting. Dr. Chengci Chen has been working on pulse crops for over 18 years in Montana and has been most recently working on intercropping a chickpea crop with oil seed crops and forage type plants for better yield and disease suppression. Karl Mavencamp has been farming for almost 40 years. He started with conventional farming practices and now follows a no-till cover crop protocol with pulse crops in his rotation. He provides us an invaluable frontline, practical, farming perspective.

 

While pulse crops are not used on every rotation an even fewer number of producers are using them with an intercropping practice. Karl shares that he was introduced to intercropping with pulse crops when he wanted to add a different crop to his rotation with a similar harvest timing and decreased input potential. Justin adds that he thinks as an industry, farming needs to produce more crops while focusing on reducing inputs and still benefiting the soil to preserve farming in the future. This led him to exploring intercropping with different crops with different advantages including pulse crops. 

 

Added benefits to incorporating pulse crops and intercropping practices include an improvement in grain protein quality, seed quality, total yield and added disease suppression according to Dr. Chen. Karl shares that anecdotally he had noticed a decrease in ascacida in his flax intercropping efforts. He shares that with his most recent harvest he got 80% chickpeas and 20% flax when they are intercropped. Karl highlights the harvestability, disease suppression and easability of storage as big advantages to the chickpea/flax intercropping. 

 

The next question involved discussing the use of fertilizers when legumes are incorporated into an operation. Dr. Chen did not find any fertility inputs such as nitrogen were needed for the flax/chickpea combination because of the chickpea nitrogen fixation. Karl echoed this experience with his flax/chickpea intercropping. Justin has noticed a decrease in canola yield without any additional nitrogen added. He suggests looking specifically at which of the intercropping crops will create the most financial and management advantages for the producer and making sure that crop is most supported. Some plants will require more nitrogen and support than others and all of these factors must be taken into account.

 

Of course introducing two different crops together creates different challenges with weed management. Dr. Chen shares that different combinations can be more easily managed than others. Some will require specific inputs and some will naturally provide weed suppression with the competition of resources. Justin recommends a pre-emergent herbicide if intercropping with pulse crops. Research into each individual crop and the combination of the two is needed when planning out your operation. 

 

Another challenge faced is post-harvest processing and storage management with two different crops being

09 Jun 2020Pulse Market Update & Understanding Rhizobia00:28:39

Pulse crops offer some great benefits to the farmers that pursue them. Today we will talk about the market opportunities pulse crops offer especially during current uncertain times in regards to the Covid Pandemic. We also discuss the benefits offered by the nitrogen fixing bacteria to the soil associated with these crops. 

Dr. Anton Bekkerman joins us from Montana State University to explain the effects of Covid on the pulse crop markets. With the possibility of shelter in place on the horizon, consumers bought a lot of storable goods including canned beans. He anticipates that the pandemic will likely increase the desire and need for these products and may result in long term consumer habits regarding pulse crop consumption.

“What makes peas, lentils, chickpeas, and other beans, particularly special is that they represent an alternative storable relatively cheap source of protein.” - Dr. Anton Bekkerman

From a global perspective, Dr. Bekkerman explains that any new trade deals have likely been put on hold. He expects the global pulse crop market is likely to be “in the status quo for the next year.” Pulse crops do not have a futures market so predicting prices can be difficult. Dr. Bekkerman recommends looking at the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service to see spot prices for pulse crops which although not guaranteed can indicate a potential value. He also highly recommends Canada Ag Statistics to get an idea of what markets are predicted to look like in Canada for pulse crops which often correlates with markets in the US.

“If I were to make a bet right now, I would say lentils are probably going to be the crop to market in September and October.” - Dr Anton Bekkerman

Beyond a niche market for consumers, pulse crops also greatly benefit the soil. Dr. Audrey Kalil,a plant pathologist at the North Dakota State University Williston Research Extension Center, joins us to explain how best to encourage the nitrogen fixing benefits the bacteria associated with pulse crops can offer. She recommends a granular inoculant that will best promote the rhizobia bacteria. Unfortunately this is also the most expensive form of inoculant. There are also peat and liquid applications available to improve the bacteria’s nitrogen fixing ability that are less expensive and can still improve the rhizobial activity. A big benefit she highlights of pulse crops is that they not only add “nitrogen to your system” but they are also building your soil. Unfortunately, this does not always translate directly into yield growth. The benefits may be “hidden.”

“I would be careful when folks say they’re not seeing the yield benefit to inoculation because that might not be the best way to understand whether you’re achieving what you want to achieve.” - Dr. Audrey Kalil

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Anton Bekkerman from Montana State University
  • Learn about how the pulse crop market has responded to the ongoing global pandemic
  • Explore resources available online to better understand what markets may look like in the fall
  • Also, meet Dr. Audrey Kalil a plant pathologist at North Dakota State University
  • Find out how to get the most out of the nitrogen fixing properties associated with pulse crops
  • Learn how to evaluate the possible advantages to adding pulse crops to your rotation



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the

30 Aug 2021Harvest and Postharvest Considerations with Dale Risula and John Ippolito00:25:12

**Take our audience survey: https://bit.ly/GPCsurvey2021

In this episode, we’ll talk about some of the unique challenges pulse growers are facing this year with the hot and dry weather, how these conditions could impact yield and quality, what tools Canadian pulse growers are using for harvest aids, and information on some alternative harvest approaches like using swathing and stripper headers.

We’re joined by Dale Risula and John Ippolito, both with the Ministry of Agriculture in Saskatchewan, Canada. Dale Risula you may remember from episode nine of last season talking about Canadian pulses. He’s the provincial specialist for pulse crops and special crops, and has been with the ministry since 1982. John Ippolito is a crops extension specialist in west central Saskatchewan, which is a large pulse growing area including lentils, chickpeas, and field peas. John spends most of his time working directly with growers on management practices. Dale starts our conversation off with a very timely and relevant topic for a lot of pulse growers throughout North America: the dryness and heat of this season, and how that will impact yield and quality. 

“I think first and foremost, the biggest impact that this is going to have is the effect on yield. Yield is likely to be down from the average for much of the province. We're not sure exactly where quality might end up just yet. Some of the grains themselves might be slightly lower than the average per bushel weight. They're also going to be subject to chipping in the dryer during harvest as they're handled with various equipment.” - Dale Risula

Beyond quality and yield deficits, Dale recommends extra attention be paid to dust control and fire hazards to create a safe working environment for producers. He also suggests extra precautions be taken post-harvest in regards to handling in order to prevent over drying and seed coat crackage. Elevated temperatures in the grains also may result in sweating that creates moisture pockets and leads to spoilage. Targeted cutting times, adjusting equipment and regulating the grain temperature are all measures that can be taken to mitigate these effects. John offers help to manage grain storage with proper handling, cooling and drying.

“Our recommendation to them would be to get it into a natural air bin. Col it down as quickly as possible to 15 degrees Celsius or probably about 60 degrees Fahrenheit because storage at those kinds of temperatures, even if they're dry is not going to go well.” - John Ippolito

Harvest aids and desiccants can and have been used to promote uniform dry down. There are area specific regulations for these products that all producers need to be aware of. To learn more about MRLs around the world, listen to episode 11 of this season with Todd Scholz. John added that although diquat is still the primary tool, there have in fact been a few new options for harvest aids...

23 Jun 2020Seed Treatments & Root Rots00:25:24

Farmer Lavern Johnson returns once again to share his insight with pulse crops. After 20 years of pulse crop farming, Lavern explained in episode 4 how root rot affected his ability to plant pulse crops for the next season. 

“As far as the root rot, the only management practice that I think I have going forwards is lengthening out the rotation.” - Lavern Johnson


Research out of Canada suggests that it can take 8 years without a pulse crop host to successfully battle the aphanomyces. For Lavern, pulse crops had become (at times) one of his most profitable crops. This year he finds himself eliminating them from his rotation for an as yet undetermined amount of time.


“Seed treatments are critical for pulses. They’re a big juicy seed and fungi love that….We just kind of run out of management options later in the season because foliar fungicides don’t translocate down to the roots. They will not protect the root.” - Dr. Mary Barrows


Dr. Mary Barrows is an Extension Plant Pathologist with Montana State University. Dr. Barrows serves as the “direct link” with growers to share information and research in order to give them the greatest advantage on their farms. She joins us to share different seed treatments for control of Aphanomyces. 


“Rotation, identifying the pathogen, using varieties, talking to your neighbors. Communication is really important for a lot of these diseases because once they build up in an area, it can be really difficult to manage.” - Dr. Mary Barrows


Dr. Barrows also recommends cleaning equipment between fields to avoid contamination. “There are a lot of factors at play in root rot and not all of them are under our control.” Weather patterns and moisture levels can have major influence on aphanomyces growth. Evidence of root rot is a honey brown color to the roots that can be easily stripped leaving a couple of real tough threads of vascular tissue. Another sign may be the leaves turning yellow from the ground up. This change is typically observed just prior to or around the first flower. To definitively identify aphanomyces she recommends sending in samples for analysis.

“Send us a sample. Send it early. And if it is not early, if it's late and you suspect it might’ve been a problem, we can actually test the soil…..Contact me directly and I’ll give you instructions.” - Dr. Mary Barrows


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:


  • Lavern Johnson returns in this episode to expand on his pulse growing experience
  • Dr. Mary Barrows of Montana State also joins us to share what techniques can be used to avoid root rot complications
  • We learn how to diagnose aphanomyces and what factors we can control to prevent it from becoming prevalent in the soils



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



28 Apr 2020Managing Fusarium and other Root Rots00:19:57

Today we are joined by farmer Lavern Johnson and Dr Lyndon Porter, a pulse crop plant pathologist with the USDA Agricultural Research Service. After 20 years of experience as a pulse crop grower, Lavern Johnson brings real world issues to the forefront today by sharing why he is unable to plant pulse crops this year. Multiple organisms have accumulated in his fields over time leading to significant root rot and making his fields unable to support pulse crops for up to 8 years.

Rarely, does any grower have fusarium or pythium as solo pathogens causing damage. The root rot complex employs multiple organisms causing more than one infection to be present. Nematodes can also contribute by wounding the plants allowing fusarium better access.

“Fusarium might be the one that starts weakening the plant and it might be aphanomyces that finishes the life of the plant…..to my knowledge there’s no soil tests that they can use to determine the level of disease that’s out there.” - Lavern Johnson


Dr. Porter describes some of the options farmers have to avoid this situation. He suggests some standard cultural practices that can help. Soil compaction restricts the growth of the roots which can encourage fusarium growth. Maintaining a soil pH outside of the range most supportive of fusarium can also be helpful. Identifying best varieties, seed depth selection, soil fertility and managing wet fields also contribute to better control of the root rot complex of disease. Residual herbicide is another factor that can affect a plant’s susceptibility to root rot. 


“I’ve seen a lot of herbicide damage that is causing poor plant vigor impacting yields and stressing plants out which causes greater root rot issues.” Dr. Lyndon Porter


Dr. Porter goes on to suggest evaluation of seed health to promote the healthiest plant. He feels a commonly overlooked factor is the health of the seed itself at planting to provide the best opportunity to maximize yield. 


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Lavern Johnson, a former pulse crop grower, who has had to shift away from pulse crops due to repeated episodes of root rot
  • Also meet Dr. Lyndon Porter who provides us with some suggestions to avoid root rot
  • Explore the many factors that contribute to the root rot complex
  • Learn what cultural practices can be employed to provide the best environment for the plants


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

21 May 2024A Mystery Disease in Chickpea with Dr. Michelle Hubbard00:27:56

Dr. Michelle Hubbard leads a field, greenhouse, growth chamber and lab based research program at Agriculture and AgriFood Canada, a part of the Canadian federal government. Based in Swift Current, Saskatchewan, her work focuses on pulse pathology, including important diseases like ascochyta blight of chickpea, root rot of pea and lentil and anthracnose of lentil. Hubbard discusses a mystery illness that has been popping up in parts of Saskatchewan and other areas in recent years. She shares the symptoms of this disease and the extensive research that has been done to try to understand what exactly is going on so that we can start to manage for it in the future. 

She provides insights not only into pulse pathology, but also into the approach scientists like herself take to try to find answers for farmers.

“It is frustrating, but it's also interesting and I keep going by thinking we're learning other things. Even if we're not finding an answer to this problem, we're learning other useful things like about drought and Verticillium and nematodes.”  - Dr. Michelle Hubbard

The exact pathogenesis of the mystery illness in chickpeas continues to elude researchers despite major efforts. The disease first emerged in 2019 and made its mark by creating severe crop loss similar to ascochyta blight. However, these chickpeas did not demonstrate obvious girdling and patterns of being transmitted airborne like typical ascochyta blight. Drought stress followed by rainfall was another factor explored for explaining the unique symptoms observed in the field but this too was disproved in trials. Herbicide application without moisture was another factor explored and it too could not be replicated successfully. The investigation continues with Dr. Hubbard offering this advice to producers. 

“Keep an eye out for it, but (don't) panic about it. If they want to find out more information or pictures, there's a lot of pictures on the Saskatchewan Pulse Growers website, as well as some old reports dating back to the beginning of the issue that explains it really well and shows pictures and examples. Or if somebody wants to contact me, I'm happy to send pictures or to help you find a link where you can find more pictures.” - Dr. Michelle Hubbard

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Michelle Hubbard a plant pathologist who leads a field, greenhouse, growth chamber and lab based research program at Agriculture and AgriFood Canada
  • Understand the emergence and research related to identifying this mystery chickpea illness
  • Learn more about Dr. Hubbard’s work at AgriFood Canada by visiting her webpage 
  • Check out the Saskatchewan Pulse Growers webpage as well to learn more about this emerging concern


Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast


29 Aug 2024Fertility for Yield and Nitrogen Fixation With Clain Jones, Ph.D.00:35:14

Dr. Clain Jones is Montana State University Extension’s soil fertility specialist. In this role he covers anything that has to do with fertilizer or nutrient cycling in both agriculture as well as home/garden systems. He started at MSU as a tenure track faculty member in 2006, and has ended up doing quite a bit of work with pulse crops over the years. He joins me today to talk about fertility in pulses, the importance of inoculation, nitrogen credits, soil pH, and the overall importance of pulse crops to soil health.

“Adding five pounds of sulfur per acre to lentils, what we found at least here in Bozeman, was that nitrogen fixation increased at a much faster rate than yield did. What that told us was that by applying sulfur, maybe we're not going to see a huge yield response, but we're going to contribute a lot more nitrogen both to that crop and to the next crop.” - Dr. Clain Jones

Dr. Jones stresses the importance of plant nutrition and pH when it comes to optimizing a pulse crop's ability to fix nitrogen. Limestone deposits in the soil can make pH values highly variable even within a field. This can make accurate soil testing a challenge. An acidic pH has a significant impact on rhizobia viability as they don’t tolerate low pH values very well. Along with pH, many micronutrients such as sulfur, potassium and phosphorus also need to be considered when assessing overall soil health and nitrogen fixation efficiency.

“We have low phosphorus because our high levels of calcium tie up that phosphorus making it less available to crops. Knowing that phosphorus is essential for nitrogen fixation, my gut feel is that phosphorus is probably the nutrient most limiting nitrogen fixation and probably pulse crop growth in our two state region.”  - Dr. Clain Jones


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Clain Jones, the Montana State University Extension’s soil fertility specialist
  • Discover the impact of pH and micronutrients on a pulse crop’s ability to fix nitrogen
  • Explore the recommended testing and values of soil nutrition to allow for optimal nitrogen fixation


Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



02 Mar 2021Crop Insurance Considerations for Pulse Crops00:13:52

March 15th is the last day to complete enrollment for 2021 agriculture risk coverage and price loss coverage programs. Considering that day is coming up in less than two weeks from when this episode publishes, we thought we’d bring you a little bit of timely information about crop insurance in pulses. 

Steve Junghans is a risk management specialist at the USDA risk management agency regional office in Billings, MT. He is the lead person there for pulse crops, and is responsible for maintaining and improving the dry bean and dry pea crop insurance programs in MT, ND, SD, and WY. He works closely with the Northern Pulse Growers Association and Northharvest Bean Growers Association, and keeps them up to date on program changes. Steve took a few minutes to give us a behind-the-scenes look into the crop insurance programs for pulses, how payouts are determined, how they are handling things like intercropping, and some of the issues they sometimes see in the process. 

“This management agency's role is to provide sound risk management tools for growers so they can have a stable income to produce crops in maintain an affordable and adequate food supply for our nation.” - Steve Junghans

Steve discusses three different plans available to producers and the types of pulse crops that apply for each. Plan One is the yield protection plan that protects against production loss only. Plan Two is the most popular and comprehensive option and provides protection against loss of revenue due to production loss, price decline or price increase or a combination of both. PlanThree is rarely selected and is the revenue protection plan with harvest price exclusion. It does not provide protection against price increase. 


“It is very important that growers market at least some of their product and report prices, even in a down market so a harvest price can be established.” - Steve Junghans


Steve says by taking this measure the producer protects themselves by establishing a more accurate harvest price in order to get the most out of their policy. Steve also offers guidance for those participating in intercropping with pulse crops. If pursuing a fall planted pulse crop, it would need to be requested by the spring sales closing date of March 15th. The grower would need to get spring coverage and consent to an inspection to identify a proper stand to uphold the crop. Increased premiums may result if not handled properly. 

Steve highlights that growers need to be aware of proper documentation in regards to written special agreements. The insurance sales agent is responsible for sending this in but producers should be aware and confirm that it happens in order to get the protection desired. 


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Steve Junghans, a risk management specialist at the USDA risk management agency regional office in Billings, MT
  • Explore the insurance options available to pulse crop growers with the upcoming deadline of March 15th



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

25 May 2021Organic Lentils and Building Timeless Seeds with Dave Oien00:31:08

Dave Oien is the Founding Farmer and President of Timeless Seeds. In this episode he reflects on decades of organic pulse crop production, breeding, handling, and marketing. He helped to pioneer the US market for growing pulses as an organic cash crop, then began selling seed to other farmers, and ultimately has grown a business of selling lentils, chickpeas, and other crops to consumers around the world. Dave’s story was even captured in a book called “Lentil Underground”. 

“These lentils are absolutely nutritious food, great for our livestock, good for our rotations, good for our farming practices, and as luck would have it, the organic industry was really kind of starting to get some legs. So the markets were expanding and we discovered that in fact, there was a need in the food market for certified organic lentils and peas.” - Dave Oien


Dave shares what it took to figure out how to grow some of these crops organically, how he has built and evolved his business over the years, and why he prefers the term resiliency over sustainability. Dave doesn’t recommend the cold-turkey approach to transitioning to organic that he took. He shares that it came with some lessons from the school of hard knocks. He quickly learned that in order to make an organic system work it was going to have to start with healthier soil and he would need to find sources of organic nitrogen. 


“The more I read, the more I learned, the more I practiced, the more it seemed like, wow, we need to change the way we do things both to meet the growing market, but also just to pay greater attention to the health of the soil.” - Dave Oien


His organic lentils were discovered by “a relatively small chain store” at the time called Trader Joe’s. That connection at a trade show led to a long term relationship that expanded Dave’s market especially as Trader Joe’s also expanded their reach. Dave now also sells his products in other natural food stores, to the restaurant industry, to stores that cater to bulk orders and ships them internationally. 


“The organic food market is a worldwide phenomenon with a worldwide demand. You gotta learn how to grow it, to meet the organic specifications and to be successful doing it, but the processing and marketing infrastructure is increasingly available.”   - Dave Oien


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dave Oien is the Founding Farmer and President of Timeless Seeds reflects on decades of organic pulse crop production, breeding, handling, and marketing. 
  • Discover how and why Dave was introduced to pulse crops and how his business has developed over the years

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



27 May 2020Resistance and In-Crop Herbicides in Pulses00:22:57

“It is difficult to find a chemistry that is safe on the crop, controls multiple weeds, is fairly easy to make, (and is) relatively inexpensive to make.” - Dr. Brian Jenks

Creating, trialing and gaining an EPA approved label for herbicides with new mechanisms of action is an expensive, difficult process. It is unlikely we will see any new chemistries in the next year or two. Pulse growers are already limited on what is available so waiting for a new product will not help them in the near future. So how can pulse growers manage their weed populations without a new product? Farmer Ryan Ellis and North Dakota State University Weed Scientist Dr. Brian Jenks return in this episode to help explain what weed management practices can and need to be applied to pulse crops. The difficulty with limiting weeds in pulse crops are the extreme limitations of in-crop additives that can be used without damaging the crop. The weed that many pulse growers are most concerned about is the emerging issue of Palmer Amaranth. There are very few if any chemical options for managing its spread.


Crop diversity is one tactic to managing weed populations. Ryan shares that his pulse crop rotation is “always sort of changing.” On top of spreading pulse crops out by 3 to 4 years he also now rotates which pulse crops he produces on that rotation. There is also evidence of weed resistance to certain herbicides which further limits their use. 


“Group one resistance is certainly going to be a problem. It is a problem, but it's going to continue to be a problem.” - Ryan Ellis


On top of having very limited post-emergence options, the crops themselves are very susceptible to the weeds. “Lentils and chickpeas aren’t that competitive” according to Dr. Brian Jenks. Killing a broadleaf weed in a broadleaf crop requires planning, timing and extreme care. Dr. Jenks highlights the significance of timing in applying post emergent sprays. 


“In general we have to spray the weeds when they’re small in order to get decent control because if we wait until the weeds are four to six inches tall, we’re going to miss them.” - Dr. Brian Jenks


Another factor Dr. Jenks explains is the timing of spring rains. While the farmer cannot control the weather, the spring rains are required to “activate (the) soil applied herbicides.” To avoid dependence on this rainfall for activation of the herbicide, Dr. Jenks recommends focusing most weed management practices in the fall.


“If we can take out 70 to 90% of the weeds in the fall, then we’re not so dependent on the rain to help us start clean.” - Dr. Brian Jenks


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:


  • Learn more from Ryan Ellis and Dr. Brian Jenks
  • Explore weed resistance issues in pulse crops
  • Hear about what practices can augment weed control in pulse crops where chemical control may be limited


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



08 Sep 2020Bringing Fall Sown Peas to Eastern Washington00:22:46

Not all crops are created equal. Sometimes, crops have the ability to contribute far more than their yield to an operation. Today we meet with Howard Nelson, a recently retired agronomist at Highline Grain Growers and Mark Sheffels a farmer who lives in Eastern Washington, the territory Howard once covered.

During his career, Howard focused his efforts on finding another crop to work into a wheat rotation to overwinter. He settled on fall sown peas for its nitrogen fixing ability and marketability as a crop. He then had to find a variety that would best thrive in the harsh winters of Eastern Washington.  The Blaze pea variety he selected may look different than conventional peas but that doesn’t take away from the farmers ability to find a market as they are commonly used as an ingredient and the outside look is less significant. Apart from a new system of planting he also had to develop a new herbicide regimen. 


“We have different issues because we’re looking at winter annual weeds versus spring germination weeds. So our major weeds are the mustard weeds….and then of course our grassy weeds….Pretty much we do all of our weed control, post emergent in the spring.” - Howard Nelson


The nitrogen fixed by the peas will help support the next crop introduced to that field. Farmers typically see fewer root diseases in wheat that follows peas. There is evidence of more micronutrients including phosphorus and sulfur in the soil following a pea harvest. All of this contributes to better yields in the wheat that follows the pea crop. 


“The one year we had a 17 bushel increase in winter wheat, following peas versus wheat following wheat, which is almost a 30% increase with no additional costs. It didn’t cost this grower anything.” - Howard Nelson


Howard helped guide Mark Sheffels operation in adding fall sown peas. After “dabbling” in peas for many years, Mark added the peas into his rotation and has seen great advantages in his wheat production. He is impressed by the ability of peas to germinate when planted 5-6 inches deep in order to have access to moisture in the soil. He is also pleased to see the benefits the crop has had on his soil’s health without requiring additional inputs. 


“With the peas and the change in rotation, it just opens up a lot of opportunities to run much cleaner rotations. And biologically…...we can do things to make our soils healthier, more productive and put them in a position to sequester more nitrogen out of the atmosphere for themselves. - Mark Sheffels


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Howard Nelson, an agronomist, and Mark Sheffels, a farmer, both from Eastern Washington
  • Learn about the benefits of adding fall sown peas to a wheat rotation
  • Explore the process Howard undertook to find the best protocol to make this pulse crop successful 
  • Hear Marks reaction to adding them to his operation and the benefits he has observed


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



21 Jul 2021Pulse Quality and an Update on MRLs with Todd Scholz00:23:43

On today’s episode we talk pulse crop quality standards and how residues and MRLs play a role in perceived quality from buyers and consumers around the world. Todd Scholz, vice president for research and member services at the USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council, joins us to discuss some of the nuances of MRLs (maximum residue limits) and what growers need to know to deal with the complex standards that exist in different global markets. He has been with the Lentil Council for over 20 years and provides great insight into navigating MRL’s and international trade.

“As countries are becoming more involved in international trade, they're establishing their own registration authorities and that's becoming a mosaic of different MRLs at different levels across the world which makes trade more complicated and makes our job as farmers more difficult.” - Todd Scholz


In order to ensure quality when it comes to residues, countries establish tolerances or maximum residue limits. This is becoming an increasingly important part of producing quality pulses for the global market because there are different approaches to determining these standards. The trend is for these requirements to become increasingly more strict. So how are growers supposed to adjust to these constraints? Todd recommends communicating with your processor, following the labels to the tee, and being keenly aware of the potential for drift. 


"It is important to our production practices to be able to use chemical pesticides, but there is an increasing concern across the world for the use of those pesticides. And you can see it in the way the registering authorities are enforcing their MRL’s. They're reducing the MRL standards, eliminating them or establishing a level of detection so that even a drift accident can cause a shipment to be rejected. The cost to that is huge.” - Todd Scholz


Despite all of the complex dynamics at play here with quality and MRLs, the most important take home is to develop that good relationship with your buyer to make sure they know what they’re getting and you know how you can maximize your revenue from your crop and the way you produce it. 


“We’re working really hard to try and harmonize MRL’s and make it as trade friendly as we can, but it's a complicated process and we need the help of our producers. ” - Todd Scholz



This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Todd Scholz, vice president for research and member services at the USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council
  • Explore the nuances involved in MRL regulations and the consequences of not working within them
  • Discover the advice he gives producers to ensure their product has a market

You can reach Todd and learn more about industry programs at the USA Dry Pea & Lentil Council website: www.USApulses.org

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



04 Oct 2023The Diverse Opportunities in Pulse Crops with Steve Tucker and Dr. Bob Harveson00:29:13

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Whether you’re from Nebraska or elsewhere, this is a great episode about what’s possible for the future of pulse crops. We talk about peas and chickpeas, but we also get into other niche opportunities like mung beans, cowpeas and more. You’ll get a sense of the emerging pulse industry in Nebraska, but also what it takes for the development of pulse crops everywhere. We discuss genetics, agronomy, disease management and marketing strategy. We start with Steve Tucker. Steve farms near Venango, Nebraska in the southwest part of the state. He has built his operation on the principle of diversity and grows up to 14 different crops.

“We can grow mung beans, I mean, there's different...aspects of these different things that we can do. What does the market need? And so I just had a conversation with a company that's looking for lupins. I don't know if you've ever heard of lupins before and so there are more various different kinds of pulse crops that who knows what else is out there and what people are looking for to utilize in food products.” - Steve Tucker

When plant pathologist Dr. Bob Harveson came to the University of Nebraska in 1999, chickpeas were really on the rise in the state. Sometime in the early 2000’s ascochyta really started to affect a lot of fields and there were no fungicides labeled for the disease for treatment. Since then he said fungicide options have improved over time as have genetics. Unfortunately, many of those same growers who experienced the devastating losses from ascochyta are very hesitant to plant chickpeas or even other pulse crops again. Despite these frustrations, Bob remains optimistic for the future of chickpeas and other pulses in the state. 

“I have a strong diagnostic background. So whenever something like this pops up, I try to determine what the problem is, how well it's distributed, you know, those sorts of things. Before you can start developing control measures, you gotta know what you've got in order to really make the right choice for that.” - Dr. Bob Harveson

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:




Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the

23 Sep 2020Postharvest in Chickpeas00:21:26

Can you tell the difference between a garbanzo bean and a chickpea? Neither can I. The bean is referred to as both so pick your favorite. Phil Hinrichs joins us from Hinrichs Trading Company to share his experiences with growing chickpeas and watching the industry grow. Initially chickpeas were mainly grown for export but in the last ten years have developed a domestic market that has really been taking off. With products like hummus and consumer desire for gluten free, chickpeas answer a lot of demands that consumers are looking for. 

“We went in ….and introduced our product and showed that we had the ability to have a consistent product available to the market. And the domestic market started waking up.” - Phil Hinrichs


While the market appears endless with crackers, breads, and even milk and yogurt products up for grabs, there are challenges to growing the crop. Firstly, there is a short planting window. Chickpeas prefer slightly warmer growing temperatures. Chickpeas also take a while to germinate which can leave them vulnerable to pests and further temperature stressors. The bloom stage can last up to 45-50 days creating better yields as opposed to green peas that only bloom for 10-15 days. Of course that time of blooming is in July which can lead to heat stress or summer rains that can affect the end product. 


“This crop does not like humidity. It's not for everybody….that’s what keeps it from expanding across the United States.” - Phil Hinrichs


Growers of specialty crops, like chickpeas, also have to be more flexible with getting paid for their product. Chickpeas move with the market which will likely require some storage and a bit of waiting to see what the need is. This does result in a premium price being paid but requires some forethought.  While the market has been damaged by covid and trading tariffs, Phil is optimistic about the future of chickpeas for both growers and global markets.


“So the part that makes it interesting to our grower is number one, it's a rotational crop for his agronomy on his farm. So he’s going to build soil. He’s also gonna break disease cycles so that's his focus.” - Phil Hinrichs


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Phil Hinrichs, a longtime chickpea farmer
  • Learn the many benefits of incorporating chickpeas into a crop rotation
  • Discover the difficulty in marketing a specialty crop and the factors that are encouraging the chickpea market
  • Explore the effects of 2020 on the chickpea market and where it might go from here



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.





27 May 2022Weed Management in Lentils with Steve Shirtliffe, Ph.D.00:23:08

Dr. Steve Shirtliffe joins us to talk about weed management in lentils. Steve is a professor in the department of plant sciences at the University of Saskatchewan. His research over the past couple of decades has focused on agronomy, with extensive work on weed management in pulses specifically. Steve and I talk about some of the challenges specific to lentils when it comes to weed management, and some of the latest research, innovation and best practices in this area. Steve and his colleagues and graduate students have had the chance to explore a lot of different possibilities for integrated weed management in pulses. One practice that has made a significant difference has been increasing seeding rates. 

“We found that basically as soon as you started to increase your seeding rate, You got more crop biomass that meant there was less weed biomass that was there. So it was essentially just kind of almost a replacement thing that the more crop biomass you got there, you got that much less weed biomass.” - Dr. Steve Shirtliffe


But of course increasing the seeding rate isn’t the only answer for organic weed management. They’ve also looked at a variety of mechanical control methods, and tried to determine what would give producers the most optimal weed control. With resistance to group two herbicides, conventional farmers are benefitting from these practices as well. Although Steve admits that herbicides are still mostly preferred while available and still effective. 


“If you can keep them weed-free from the five node stage to the ten node stage, if you can control weeds in that zone, you're home free, that's it. You don't have to worry about the weeds that start after that. And if you control them by the five node stage, they haven't done enough damage. So if you can keep them weed free in that period, you've done your job.” - Dr. Steve Shirtliffe


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Steve Shirtliffe, a professor in the department of plant sciences at the University of Saskatchewan.
  • Explore the effect of seeding rate in organic weed management especially with limited options for inputs when growing pulse crops
  • Discover equipment and timing options that most efficiently and effectively manage weed populations



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.


30 Jun 2021Disease Detection Tools with Syama Chatterton, Ph.D.00:26:00

Dr. Syama Chatterton is a research scientist with Agriculture and AgriFood Canada in Lethbridge, Alberta. For the past 10 years, Dr. Chatterton’s work has focused on soilborne diseases and root rot pathogens of pulses. Today’s episode focuses on the tools Dr. Chatterton and her colleagues are developing to more accurately and efficiently test for disease presence in soils for pathogens like aphanomyces and fusarium. The idea behind these tools they are developing is to lower the risk for farmers, make it easier to get information about this disease presence, and allow them to make more data-driven decisions about what to plant and when. 

“If you grow a pea or lentil crop, and then you notice that you have a root rot issue in your field one year, our recommendation now is to stay out of that field for at least six to eight years….So that's why we're trying to develop some tools so that producers can test their soils, get an idea of what pathogens are in their soils, the quantity of pathogens in their soils, and then know whether its safe to plant peas or lentils again.” - Dr. Syama Chatterton


With a small sample, they are able to identify whether or not that targeted disease, such as the “root rot complex,” is present in a farmer’s soil. So essentially they are counting the detectable DNA to quantify the oospores of that pathogen in the soil. The hope is that this will lead to the ability to quantify the amount of disease presence in a soil in a timely manner, and start to establish thresholds to help a farmer determine when they should and should not plant. Ultimately, the hope is that farmers, when armed with the data from these tools, will be able to manage these diseases in a way that allows them to keep pulses in a regular rotation without proliferating the presence of these pathogens over time. 


“If you're considering planting peas in that field and you want to know, am I going to be at a risk for root rot? Then you can go on and collect samples in the spring prior to planting.” - Dr. Syama Chatterton


With something like this that is able to use such a small soil sample, the sampling technique is extremely important to make sure the results are representative and actionable. At present, the protocol includes sampling at 10 sites and testing each of them separately to look for pathogens. Dr. Chatterton highlights that the results are only as valuable as the samples that have been collected. Low spots, water tracks or areas of decreased yield are the best places to focus your sampling. Identifying different species of pathogens and developing threshold values for producers to know how to use the results is an ongoing process.


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Syama Chatterton, a research scientist with Agriculture and AgriFood Canada in Lethbridge, Alberta. 
  • Explore the tools she is developing to identify the risk of disease based on soil genetic testing
  • Discover the process she is using to assess these soils and the benefits they may provide pulse crop producers


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by

25 Aug 2020Harvest Episode - Desiccation and an Update on Pulse Crop Markets00:26:27

Today in episode ten, we explore harvest aids with Dr. Drew Lyon from Washington State University. We also get an update on current pulse markets from Kevin Buxa of Halo Commodity Company based in Fargo, ND. 

If you’re new to pulse crops, they include crops such as field peas, chickpeas and lentils. This show follows some pulse crop farmers through the growing season and dives into the research that’s helping them through some of the challenges they face. We’ll also talk to a number of other industry stakeholders along the way. 


We begin today’s episode with an update on the fundamentals driving pulse markets. Kevin Buxa of Halo Commodity Company joins us. Based in Fargo, Kevin purchases commodities on-farm in North Dakota and Montana, and sells to various processors and handlers throughout the region. He also runs a stand-alone third party trucking company which enables him to expand his trading to a larger geography and more markets. For pulses, his primary focus is on peas and lentils.

Then we turn our attention now to our featured topic: harvest. Pulses are fairly indeterminate, which means they will continue to flower until they reach some sort of stress, such as lack of moisture, high temperatures, or nutrient deficiency. However, harvest timing is critical to optimize yield and quality, so growers often dessicate their crops in preparation of harvest. 


Here to talk about this process and the types of available harvest aids is Dr. Drew Lyon. Drew is a Professor and the Endowed Chair of Small Grains Extension and Research for Weed Science at Washington State University in Pullman. Prior to moving to Washington in 2012, he spent 22 years as a Dryland Cropping Systems Specialist at the University of Nebraska at the Panhandle Research and Extension Center in Scottsbluff. His endowment is from the WA Grain Commission, so he spends a lot of his time with wheat growers, but most of them also include pulses in their rotations.


We have a lot more great information coming your way throughout the 2020 growing season. Please subscribe and tell a friend who is also interested in pulses. You can also find all of the episodes at www.GrowingPulseCrops.com


This show is brought to you by the Pulse Crops Working Group with support from the North Central IPM Center. We’re releasing two of these every month throughout the growing season, so we look forward to bringing you your next episode very soon.   




11 Aug 2020Pea Aphids and Pea Leaf Weevil00:24:27

Pulses require unique rotations, harvesting and inputs. To continue with this theme, they also have unique pest challenges. Today we are joined by Lance Lindbloom the Lead Agronomist for 406 Agronomy and Dr. Sean Prager an Assistant Professor at the University of Saskatchewan College of Agriculture and Bioresources Plant Science Department.

“Our chickpeas are ones that are most bulletproof when it comes to insects.” - Lance Lindbloom


Lentils, on the other hand, seem to be most affected by pests specifically grasshoppers and aphids. The Pea Leaf Weevil can cause a lot of damage to pea crops and can be difficult to identify. The many life stages will drain the yield of the crop. While adults feed on the leaves, the larval stage hollows out the nodules below ground and are therefore more difficult to find..


“If you’re seeing the damage this year. You’re seeing them in the area. You really need to look at using the seed treat to kind of get control of them, at least to hold down that damage on those plants.” - Lance Lindbloom


Pea aphids are also extremely difficult to observe. Sweep netting is the practice used to capture and observe aphid populations. At that time you can also scout for aphid predators such as ladybugs to evaluate their population and ability to prey on aphids.


“In some ways it might be the biggest concern we have is actually increasingly now pea aphids. Because in bad years, even without any viruses, just on their own they’re really really problematic. - Dr. Sean Prager


Pea aphids are becoming more prominent of a concern because of their likelihood to transfer to and become problematic for other pulse crops. Again, they can be difficult to identify and evaluate for thresholds of aphid populations. Dr. Prager is currently trying to create a measurable threshold for producers that doesn’t involve counting individual aphids. Tracking wind trajectories can help producers predict when aphids might be spread or transferred between fields which would indicate increasing efforts to scout for evidence of infestation. While plants can tolerate a certain population of aphids they are very susceptible to the viruses they carry so the tolerance threshold decreases dramatically when that occurs. 


“All bets are off if there actually is virus being transmitted by those aphids. Then the rules change.” - Dr. Sean Prager


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Lance Lindbloom and Dr. Sean Prager as they discuss pulse crop pests
  • Explore the pests causing the most concern in pulse crops
  • Learn about different management and scouting techniques in regards to pests
  • Find out what you can do to keep this challenge from becoming a very real problem


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



16 Jun 2022Adding Value to Northern Crops with Mark Jirik of the Northern Crops Institute00:19:50

Mark Jirik of the Northern Crops Institute joins the show to talk about their value-added product development and their role in education of a variety of crops. Northern Crops Institute is an international meeting and learning center that unites customers, commodity traders, technical experts, and professors for discussion and education. Since 1983, over 133 nations have sent participants to NCI who are government representatives, private industry agriculture workers, or from other commodity utilization industries. 

“95% of our course participants had a better understanding of the US supply chain. 99% had a better understanding of quality and 51% increased their purchase of US commodities as a result of what they learned in our courses.” - Mark Jirik


To carry out their mission, NCI focuses on product development work and technical training and education. And like everyone else, they really had to adapt to the events of the past couple of years. 


“The pandemic has really forced us to take a look at how we do things. So when we talk about education and technical education, historically, that has been in person training….We do some domestic facing courses as well. And obviously with a pandemic that couldn't happen. So we ended up moving a lot of that education online.” - Mark Jirik


Along with extensive education services, NCI services producers by identifying best product development processes. What they do is not really research, but everything related to the development of a process to get the final product consumer-ready.This unique vantage point has given Mark a special perspective on the global agricultural industry. 


“Pulses are a very versatile crop. And when you start looking at the last 10, 15, 20 years, we've been in this protein pool market and pulses have been a very important component….whether you start talking Africa or other parts of Asia, there’s gonna be people that are hungry for protein and I think pulses fit a very nice niche for those people.” - Mark Jirik


To continue to meet the developmental needs of the global food industry, NCI is going to be moving into a brand new facility on the North Dakota State University campus. This new facility will help NCI’s work on behalf of farmers to best position themselves for the future ahead.


“(We are making) sure that people know who NCI is, but more importantly, when they think of quality pulses, they think of our region…it's about increasing the bottom line for growers.” - Mark Jirik



This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Mark Jirik, Director of the Northern Crops Institute
  • Explore the benefits NCI offers producers and the education services they provide to global markets to encourage US commodity consumption
  • Learn about the new facility NCI will grow into to better facilitate their end-product development process and educational services


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.


28 Jun 2022Building Soil Health with Pulses in Diverse Rotations featuring Greg Busch00:20:11

Greg Busch is a farmer in the far northwest corner of North Dakota. He farms with his wife Jessica and they’ve been growing pulses as part of their rotation for over thirty years. Greg joins us over the next two episodes to talk about what led him to diversify his rotation to include up to ten different crops. He tells us what he has learned through these experiences and where pulses specifically fit into the mix. 

“When we first started farming and specifically when we first started no-till we were a monoculture and we saw a lot of problems with that, a lot of disease. It took a lot of extra fertilizer to keep growing crops like that.….We couldn't continue to do that. We were seeing depletion in our soil, erosion and land costs were getting higher.” - Greg Busch


A local extension agent introduced the Busch operation to field peas in an effort to more efficiently use his land. With that addition, they noticed not only could they grow the crop but they had reduced fertilizer inputs as early as the next year. Forgive the pun but with that the seed of crop diversity was planted. This crop diversity quickly enhanced their soil health by decreasing erosion and fertilizer needs confirmed with the Haney Soil Test.


“We do have a nice residual of nitrogen when we've done our soil tests. It comes back telling us that. We do the Haney Soil Test on most of our ground every year and they give you a soil health score based on a number of different things, carbon release is one of them. And those fields always seem to show higher and we’ve been very pleased.” - Greg Busch


Greg has noticed that there is much less tillage in his area in North Dakota. Less labor, less equipment costs, less passes in the fields and not to forget many soil health benefits have enticed many producers to pursue no-till practices. A major goal for Greg on his operation has been to increase the organic matter in his fields. His soil tests have proven that he has certainly accomplished that goal with a 3-4 times higher organic matter observed since adopting these rotations and practices. 


“It just seems like the ground is a lot more forgiving. It seems to absorb heavy rainfall events better than fields with low organic matter. And it also seems to carry us through short droughts better than the ground with less organic matter. ” - Greg Busch


Join us in the next episode where Greg share’s specifically about his experiences with intercropping. 



This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Greg Busch is a farmer up in the far northwest corner of North Dakota
  • Explore the journey he has taken from a monoculture operation to one with 8 to 10 rotations including pulse crops
  • Discover the many soil health benefits he has observed and how he identifies them and uses them to his advantage
  • Stay tuned for the next episode where Greg joins us again to share his experience with intercropping


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



07 May 2024Field Pea Genetics with Tom Warkentin, Ph.D.00:30:05

Dr. Tom Warkentin is a professor at the University of Saskatchewan where he is part of a team at the Crop Development Center. He has been a pulse crop breeder for about 30 years, mostly focused on field peas. Warkentin discusses the progress of his pulse crop breeding program over the decades, including varieties that have had a big impact on the industry. He also shares how he balances the need to improve genetics on multiple fronts all at once, like yield, quality, lodging, disease resistance, protein and a number of other factors. He’ll also cover what’s in the pipeline currently for new varieties and what questions and areas of research are still left unanswered. 

“Definitely yield is first and we keep pushing to improve yield. I think if we go through the records we’ve probably boosted yield 1 to 2% per year if you take the long-term average over a couple of decades. Second trait that farmers definitely like is lodging resistance, so the ability to stay upright. That has remained as probably the second most important trait in pea varieties over the last 30 years.”  - Dr. Tom Warkentin

Other priorities they focus on include protein quality and quantity, root rot resistance and ascochyta resistance. Dr. Warkentin discusses where these priorities come from including producer requests, processor preferences and consumer demands. Employing different techniques to highlight different characteristics is a lengthy difficult process in plant genetics that Dr. Warkentin’s team have been fine-tuning for years.

“So a combination of conventional breeding and marker assisted breeding and screening material with the actual pathogens, either indoors or outdoors.  All of those approaches we're using.” - Dr. Tom Warkentin

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Tom Warkentin, a professor at the University of Saskatchewan where he is part of a team at the Crop Development Center.
  • Discover the priorities of genetic traits that his breeding program is addressing in peas and the impact this development is having on the pulse crop industry
  • Explore the process the plant breeding team is employing to improve pulse crop genetics
  • Learn more about Dr. Warkentin’s work at the University of Saskatchewan by visiting his research webpage 


Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



17 Jun 2024The Seed Business With Charlie Cahill00:32:18

Charlie Cahill developed his knowledge of dryland farming during the 1990s, ultimately becoming what one nominator called “the go-to guy” for information on agronomic practices and seed genetics in the region. A graduate of Montana State University, Cahill has served on the board of the Montana Seed Growers Association and helped create the pulse checkoff program in Montana, which allows growers a voice in how their contributions are invested around the state.

“Farmers traditionally have been used to being able to keep and trade their own seed amongst other growers, and this has been going on (for) an exceptional amount of time. Well, if you don't have money to actually go into the breeding programs, you don't get new stuff. And if you look at all of the crops that have money in them: corn, canola, soybeans. We spend a lot of money for the seed, but at the same time, you'll notice we also get really neat stuff.” - Charlie Cahill

Cahill joins the show to talk about the current state of the seed industry in Montana, some inside information on the seed business and what’s driving seed choices, and trying to bring together market demand and producer needs into a valuable and profitable seed technology. 

“The demand right now is far outstripping the supply on (lentil) seed.  We are probably one of the largest sellers of lentil seed in the United States and we're sold out at the moment, and our production was okay. So that gives you an idea.” - Charlie Cahill

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Charlie Cahill of Cahill Seeds, and learn about the history of pulse seed production in Montana
  • Learn about some of the drivers of pulse crop seed development
  • Hear more about what buyers of pulses are looking for in genetics in the future
  • Discover what it’s like be an independent seed producer



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.


12 May 2021Curating Pulse Crop Genetics with Clare Coyne, Ph.D.00:23:03

In this episode, Dr. Clare Coyne, curator of the USDA cool season food legume collection in Pullman, Washington gives us a really fascinating look into this extensive collection. You’ll hear how the collection is curated, preserved and utilized to continue to provide high quality seed to researchers, and ultimately to farmers. The seeds are stored under refrigeration and controlled humidity as part of a combined state and USDA effort. Under ideal conditions, they could store as long as 100 years. 

Dr. Coyne has worked at the station for 25 years and has been in her current role since 1998. She's responsible for over 22,000 accessions of peas, lentils, chickpeas and fava beans. This collection serves as the genetic resources available to breeders and researchers to develop new varieties of pulse crops.


“Plant genetic resources are a guarantee that we can continue to improve the farmgate value of that harvested crop.” - Dr. Clare Coyne


The program for maintaining our crops' genetic resources is not new. The United States has been collecting seeds for crops of interest since the founding fathers. “We can look at the USDA system as the gold standard for plant genetic resources in the world.” There are other extensive collections in stations located in Mexico, Morocco and India to name a few. But these collections don’t just exist for academic or historical purposes. They serve a very important role in making sure that breeders have the genetic material they need to develop varieties that continue to meet the needs of growers. 


“If we're presented with a new disease or a disease that in the past wasn't a problem and all of a sudden becomes a problem, then we need these breeding resources.” - Dr. Clare Coyne


Dr. Coyne offers root rot resistant genetics as a more recent need among producers. Cultivars for this ability were screened in the gene bank and are likely to make a difference for the growers. Fortunately, these collections continue to expand with a big focus being put on wild relative varieties of current crops. “We're realizing that the genetic reserve that's held in these crop wild relatives is very key to future progress made in our crops and not just on diseases, but also on yield components and nutritional components.” Once collected, Dr. Coyne and her colleagues grow these lines out in the field and collect data. That data is available online to researchers of all kinds wanting to utilize these genetics. 


“Kind of a bottom line for growers is we can rely on a genetic answer so that when you plant that cultivar you already have a package where you're ahead of the game. If there is drought tolerance, if there is heat tolerance, if there is disease resistance in the genetics of that cultivar that you're planting, then that's an additional production cost that you don't have to bear.” Dr. Clare Coyne



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

28 Feb 2023Crop Diversification and Fertility with Perry Miller, Ph.D.00:22:45

Dr. Perry Miller is a cropping systems scientist in the Land Resources and Environmental Sciences Dept at Montana State University. He specializes in crop diversification strategies and says a big chunk of that work includes working with pulse crops and how they can make other crops, namely wheat, grow better. In this episode, Miller discusses some of these crop diversification strategies, the benefits to including pulse crop rotations, some of the work they're doing on crop fertility and how much nitrogen benefit he’s seeing from peas and lentils. 

“So I can best speak from the Montana perspective, and I would say the evidence is very strong that our agriculture systems have become more diversified. Farmers have become more adventurous, more risk takers than they were in the past…So yeah, our systems have diversified pretty dramatically.” - Dr. Perry Miller

In Montana, Miller has seen sharp reductions in summer fallow in no small part because peas and lentils are a viable option. One of the benefits to diversifying a rotation by adding these crops is the potential nitrogen benefits. Miller emphasizes that the benefits are real, but they aren’t very predictable or as cut and dry as we might want them to be. 

“So what is that nitrogen benefit behind pulse crops? It's not super easy to predict, but it's real, it's common and it happens often…If you grow it once, it's hit and miss whether you're gonna get a nitrogen response behind it. The second time, especially the third time, there's been a pulse crop on that field, it seems like it's much more reliable in terms of that nitrogen response.” -Dr. Perry Miller

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Perry Miller, cropping systems scientist in the Land Resources and Environmental Sciences Dept at Montana State University
  • Explore the strategy behind crop diversity and the advantages producers can experience by planning their crop rotations with future inputs and soil health in mind while moving away from summer fallow practices
  • Understand the impact of no-till and water infiltration in combination with strategic crop diversity as a combined effort to improve yield, sustainability and productivity of the land



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

10 Jul 2023Weed Management in Chickpeas with Dr. Drew Lyon00:25:31

Dr. Drew Lyon is a Professor and the Endowed Chair of Small Grains Extension and Research for Weed Science at Washington State University in Pullman. Prior to moving to Washington in 2012, he spent 22 years as a Dryland Cropping Systems Specialist at the University of Nebraska at the Panhandle Research and Extension Center in Scottsbluff. His endowment is from the WA Grain Commission, so he spends a lot of his time with wheat growers, but most of them also include pulses in their rotations. Our discussion mostly focuses on integrated weed management of chickpeas, from cultural practices to herbicides to biologicals. 

“We do have some effective herbicides out there. In this part of the world nature doesn't always provide us with the moisture at the right time to get those products activated and going, that increases our need to use things other than herbicides for weed control. Because we've had 30 years of really effective herbicides that's the first place a lot of growers think. But I think we're gonna have to start thinking more about other approaches, things we used to do 40 and 50 years ago before herbicides were so effective.” - Dr. Drew Lyon

Lyon has seen herbicide tools come and go, both in their effectiveness and their availability. Because of this, he is a big advocate for an integrated weed management program, which he says all starts with trying to grow a competitive crop. He shares that there are also things that can be done to try to manage the overall seed bank of the weeds on fields. Cover crops, he says, can also be helpful with weed suppression if you have the moisture. When all is said and done, Lyon’s advice on weed management comes down to three basic principles: don’t get weeds started, do everything you can to grow a competitive crop, and always be changing things up.

“Prevent weed problems from starting. If you don't have certain weeds on your farm, make sure you don't get them… Do everything you can to grow a competitive crop…And then the other thing is to change things up. Anytime you do the same thing over and over again, you tend to select for those weeds that do well in that system…Human nature is that we like to stick with things until we break them, but that's the recipe for getting weed problems” - Dr Drew Lyon

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Join Dr. Drew Lyon is a Professor and the Endowed Chair of Small Grains Extension and Research for Weed Science at Washington State University in Pullman
  • Discussion of past, current and future integrated weed management for pulse crop producers
  • Re-visit Dr. Drew Lyon’s discussion on harvest aids from season one in episode 12


Growing Pulse Crops is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



01 Jun 2023Nodulation and Nitrogen Fixation with Barney Geddes, Ph.D.00:31:09

Dr. Barney Geddes is an assistant professor at North Dakota State University in the Department of Microbiological Sciences. His work focuses on microbes with the goal of boosting crop yields for farmers. More specifically he studies rhizobia which form symbiotic relationships with legume crops like pulses. In this episode, Geddes explains how nodulation works and what that means for farm decisions like inoculants. He grew up on a farm in Manitoba, and after studying microbiology as an undergrad, he decided to apply this knowledge to his lifelong passion for sustainable agriculture. His perspective is deep into the science but also rooted in the reality of growing up on a commercial farm. 

“Nodulation or the ultimate formation of a root nodule on the root of these pulses is really the result of quite an elegant communication and signal exchange between the plant and the microbe…It's really a communication between the two that ultimately leads the plant to understand it has the right microbe there to allow it to kind of gain entry and then it builds this house for it called the root nodule.” - Dr. Barney Geddes

According to Geddes, inoculation is “kind of a bet hedging process” in that producers are just making sure all the building blocks are made available for nodulation to occur. The plant will continue to send out signals to create nodules and will turn off those signals once they have met their needs. In this way, if there is excessive nitrogen in the soil, the plant will not be prompted to form the symbiotic relationship and nodulate. Plant stress and soil pH will also impact the symbiotic relationship and the success of nodulation.

“We're trying to build a translatable knowledge base that can lead to improvements in the industry. So that's been a big focus for us, is competition. These are living organisms that have to come into our environment and thrive there somehow…But thinking about that competition and, and what allows a microbe to thrive in a new environment is something we're starting to do a lot.” - Dr. Barney Geddes

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Barney Geddes an assistant professor at North Dakota State University in the Department of Microbiological Sciences
  • Explore the intricacies of nodulation and the components that make it successful in the field
  • Discover the best use scenarios for inoculants to encourage nodulation


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.




06 Feb 2024Sweet Lupins with Dr. Mike Ostlie00:30:36

In this episode we’re looking at a new pulse crop: sweet white lupins. Dr. Mike Ostlie is the director of the Carrington Research Extension Center at North Dakota State University. In the early 2000s a private company that was developing lupin varieties had gone out of business and the germplasm was given to NDSU to work on varieties. Now they’re close to releasing new varieties and Ostlie joins us to share why this is exciting for growers and for the pulse crops industry in general. 

“It's actually really an exciting time to be in the lupin world right now because there's a lot of interest in it I think all around in people looking for some new food ingredients, for instance, on the buyer side. As well as some farmers that are interested in getting something a little bit different in their crop rotation.” - Dr. Mike Ostlie

While these varieties of sweet white lupins will be new to many US growers, there is also an initiative in Canada to develop and release blue lupins which have a lot of the same qualities. These qualities include being a strong nitrogen fixer, a phosphorous scavenger, and a high protein legume. Ostlie noted that there is some existing production of sweet lupin in Australia that mainly goes to the pet food and livestock feed industries there. 


“The lupins have pretty wide adaptability in the northern plains in the fact that they produce reasonable yield under those very large drought conditions. When they're provided water, the yield potential is quite high….We've seen yields get up to 60 to 70 bushels an acre with lupins, which again, is very competitive with a lot of crops in the area.” - Dr. Mike Ostlie

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Dr. Mike Ostlie shares the development and potential of white lupins where varieties are being developed at the Carrington Research Extension Center at NDSU
  • Discover the yield potential and resilience of the Lupin plant that is also known for its ability to scavenge phosphorus and fix nitrogen
  • Learn the unique characteristics and input needs for this up and coming pulse crop


Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



29 Aug 2023Winter Peas with Dr. Steve Van Vleet00:30:06

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Dr. Steve Van Vleet spent about 18 years as a regional extension specialist for Washington State University, and today is a research agronomist with The McGregor Company. For most of his career, pulses have been an important part of his work, and he joins us to talk about his excitement for the potential of winter peas. We’re not talking about Austrian Winter Peas, which are feed grade peas that are smaller in size and darker in color. We’re talking about food grade winter peas, which have been available for several years in certain growing areas. Steve says the differences are larger size of at least 17 grams, a clear seed coat, and a green or yellow cotyledon. 

“Multiple years, my average yield of my winter peas was 6,000 pounds. That's between all the varieties. Spring pea will range from 2,500 pounds up to 4,500 pounds. But I can get 7,000 or 7,500 pounds off some of the different winter pea varieties. That's the part that makes me super excited..” - Dr. Steve Van Vleet

Steve talks about why he believes this crop is a great option for a lot more growers than are using them currently and some considerations for growing winter peas including seeding depths and timing and pest and disease management. The limiting factor he sees playing a big role in this variety’s success is the access producers have to markets.

“Not are you only helping the soil, helping another crop that you're producing, which makes it better, makes it healthier. But what are you doing when it comes to human health?... If we could market this and people would become educated and say, this is one of the most healthy crops that we can produce and improves human health, soil health, crop health, other crop health. Not just as a rotational crop, but this could be a major crop. That's where I see opportunity.” - Dr. Steve Van Vleet


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Steve Van Vleet a former regional extension specialist for Washington State University and current research agronomist with The McGregor Company
  • Explore the benefits of the winter pea variety and the potential it offers producers
  • Read more about  “Pea Weevil Management in Winter Peas” in this Washington State University publication


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



21 Apr 2023Managing Root Rots in Peas and Lentils with Michael Wunsch, Ph.D.00:25:29

Dr. Michael Wunsch is a Plant Pathologist at the Carrington Research Extension Center at North Dakota State University. He holds a Ph.D. from Cornell University in 2010, and has worked for NDSU ever since and focused on disease management problems on a wide breadth of crops grown in North Dakota. Michael’s focus is on applied research that can directly address farmer needs. In this episode we focus specifically on root rots in peas and lentils and how the soil temperature can affect successful yields.

“Basically what happens is, is if your soil temperatures are below 50 degrees Fahrenheit in that seven day period after planting the root rot severity is way lower, way lower. You're cutting your fusarium and aphanomyces root rot in half at those early mid vegetative growth. So they can get a lot bigger before the root rot gets bad.” - Dr. Michael Wunsch

Michael emphasizes that there are no silver bullets with these root rots and that both warm and cool season root rots cause problems for producers and need to be accounted for. Seed treatments with proper efficacy for pythium and rhizoctonia will start crops off on the right foot. Fusarium and aphanomyces become a bigger issue in warmer saturated soils later in the summer. These two pathogens tend to impregnate fields one year and won’t cause a problem until the next year's plantings. Unfortunately seed treatments will no longer be present when temperatures warm up. Planting early in cooler soils will allow for the plants to be larger and more hardy prior to when their warm fungal adversaries will start causing a problem. The third management strategy that is an important piece for managing these root rots is crop rotation. 


“It's just a no-brainer. You use a seed treatment with peas when you're planting in soils below 50 degrees Fahrenheit, and if you want to minimize your root rot, you need to plant in soils that are cool…The seed treatment basically gives you another four to five bushels. And so you're looking at a four to eight bushel gain by optimizing your planting day relative to soil temperature….Suddenly you're at eight to 13 bushels with those two tools.” - Dr. Michael Wunsch


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Michael Wunsch is a Plant Pathologist at the Carrington Research Extension Center at North Dakota State University.
  • Explore different strategies that when integrated together can help producers manage common causes for devastating root rot
  • Discover the ongoing research into root rot and the further techniques being assessed

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



14 Apr 2020Disease Management in Pulses00:22:23

Today we discuss soil-borne and seed-borne diseases in pulse crops. We are joined by Chris Westergard a farmer in Montana, who gives us insight into what his operation looks like and how he manages these risks to his pulse crops. Then Dr. Michael Wunsch, a Plant Pathologist at the NDSU Carrington Research Extension Center, shares some of the ongoing research and recommendations for combating these obstacles. Despite cold temperatures in Montana at the moment, Chris is turning his attention to his seed in preparation for planting. He evaluates his seed quality, germination and risk of Ascochyta.

“Ascochyta is by far the most prevalent and the most yield limiting in chickpeas. It can be in peas and lentils too….. But chickpeas seem to be way more susceptible to it.” - Chris Westergard


Chris highlights weed control, seed sources, soil temperatures and identifying the types of inoculant he needs to have ready as other preparation measures prior to planting. Dr. Wunsch echoes that advice citing research that confirms the effects of soil temperature and environmental conditions on pulse crop disease rates including Ascochyta, Pythium and Rhizoctonia. Unfortunately though Chris claims that “if everyone waited for optimal soil (temperatures) they’d never get anything done.” This leads to the use of seed treatments. 


“Anytime you’re planting into cold soils, you definitely want to have a seed treatment. When you’re planting relatively late, say the third week of May, and the soils are warm…..and not too wet…..you can probably get away with not treating the chickpeas.” -Dr. Michael Wunsch


But just as with anything in farming, it's never simple. As Dr. Wunsch says “agronomic performance is a product of multiple factors.” His research has also explored the effects of early planting on root rot. He has found that “Early planting reduces the severity of your root rot and it reduces it by a lot.” 


“So planting date is a really, really important tool for managing these (diseases).” -Dr. Michael Wunsch


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:


  • Meet Chris Westergard and Dr. Michael Wunsch
  • Learn about how Chris starts the process of planting preparation
  • Discover the many obstacles that exist for pulse crops from seed and soil borne diseases
  • Explore different factors that can be adjusted to reduce the risks these diseases pose


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

16 Feb 2021Farm Planning and Budgeting Tools00:25:18

Today we consider the economic opportunities of adding pulse crops into your operations. Dan Folske is an extension agent in Burke County, North Dakota, which is in the northwest part of the state. He’s been there in that position for over 30 years, and a big part of what he does is work with farmers to establish budgets and utilize tools for business decisions. Dan’s going to share what he’s seeing on the economics of planting pulses, and some tools he utilizes with the farmers he works with.

“(One farmer’s) durum production on those fields where he seeded into the pea stubble the following year was so much better that he thought he could probably raise peas and dump them over the edge of the coulee and be ahead. It was quite an eye opener in terms of what adjusting your crop rotations can do.” - Dan Folske

“Cash flow is always the big issue for anyone,” remarks Dan. NDSU extension publishes several tools to help producers evaluate different regional crop budgets which allow for planning with best estimates of expected expenses and price opportunities. Dan highlights that the better records each operation keeps, the more accurate their estimates will be when plugged into the provided spreadsheets. Dan directs any producers interested in using these tools to the following websites:


 

“One of the tough things about marketing is you really need to know what your costs are, what that market price is that you need to have a profit and profitability on your farm.” - Dan Folske


Weed control and herbicide resistance have been driving forces in integrating pulse crops. With the tools listed above, producers can estimate what financial benefits they may hope to gain with the addition of different crops in production. Unfortunately, pulse crops at the moment appear to be down in cost benefit but by utilizing these tools producers can best manage expectations and decide what works best for their individual needs and goals. These tools are routinely updated and will support producers in knowing when integration may be of best value for them. 


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dan Folske, an extension agent in Burke County, North Dakota
  • Explore the tools and research available to producers to help them manage, predict and plan for different budgets based on historical averages of land cost, equipment investment, insurance expenses, etc. 
  • Discover what brought pulse crops into the rotation of North Dakota growers

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.


26 Aug 2022Pulse Production in Nebraska and Wyoming00:29:01

Dr. Cody Creech and Dr. Carrie Eberle join the show to talk about new frontiers for pulse crops in Nebraska and Wyoming. We’ll explore where and how these crops are fitting into rotations, the challenges of growing pulses in new areas, double cropping, and water use efficiency. 

Cody is a dryland cropping systems specialist with the University of Nebraska Lincoln located at the panhandle center in Western Nebraska. He focuses on crops that can be grown without needing much water including soil water conservation, fertility, weed management and ways to improve overall use efficiency in Western Nebraska. 


“This area of Nebraska and Wyoming has not been a target for breeding programs for these pulse crops. And so in the past 10 years, there's been a lot of improvement in these varieties, much better varieties that are much better adapted, but there's still a long ways to go in that realm. If we can keep working on that breeding side of things, I think we're gonna see continued success in pulse crops in both Nebraska and Wyoming.” - Cody Creech, Ph.D.


Carrie, at the time of this interview was a cropping systems agronomist with the University of Wyoming located studying alternative crops for the region and looking at sustainable farming practices. Since the time this interview took place back in January, she has since gone on to work for the USDA ARS as an agroecologist based in Morris, Minnesota. 


“I think for the Wyoming system, our farmers are mostly looking to understand if the crop is going to work for them. So there's questions just about growing in the region and when they should plant, how they harvest, what their populations look like. There's a lot of questions around weed control in those crops. And then the other big challenge for our farmers is always access to markets.” - Carrie Eberle, Ph.D.



This week on Growing Pulse Crops

  • Meet Dr. Cody Creech and Dr. Carrie Eberle
  • What is prompting growers in Wyoming and Nebraska to consider pulse crops for the first times
  • The need for genetics, research, and markets in order to expand the production of pulses in this area
  • How pulse crops figure into the need for water use efficiency in these dry areas



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

23 Apr 2024DNA Testing For Herbicide Resistance With Zack Bateson of the National Ag Genotyping Center00:29:01

Zack Bateson is the Research Manager at the National Ag Genotyping Center based in Fargo, North Dakota. You heard a little bit about the work the National Genotyping Center is doing in episode five with Dr. Brian Jenks.  In this episode we dive deeper into the services they offer to provide DNA testing for farmers and agronomists. Bateson got his start in DNA-based testing working in wildlife biology with prairie chickens and lizards, but says all of the skills can be applied to any organisms including variety detection, herbicide resistance, and soil pathogens, which is where he focuses today. 

“Growers can send us kochia and we can genotype them for the resistance to group 14. Then they're able to have a discussion with either their agronomists or other consultants to see whether it can be another actionable spraying opportunity or if there's something else that they can do about these resistant weeds.” - Zach Bateson

The National Ag Genotyping Center is a private nonprofit diagnostic lab that provides genetic testing to identify pathogens, pests and genetic traits such as resistance to herbicides. This valuable information can help growers determine next steps in treatment of fields without having to rely solely on potentially costly trial and error practices. Alongside these established practices they are also developing identification testing for different causes of root rot.

“The work involved is simpler for a person to do, especially with robotics, we can not only do tens of samples per day, but we can extract from hundreds of samples per day. We can test for multiple genetic markers throughout the day, so we're talking hundreds and almost thousands of data points that can be processed and reported out.” - Zach Bateson

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Zack Bateson, the Research Manager at the National Ag Genotyping Center based in Fargo, North Dakota
  • Explore the work done at the National Ag Genotyping Center and the value they provide growers in North Dakota. 
  • Discover the support and research being developed at the National Ag Genotyping Center and the future projects they expect to participate in



Growing Pulse Crops is produced by Dr. Audrey Kalil and hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast



18 Aug 2021Pulse Crops for Feed and Forage with Zac Carlson, Ph.D.00:24:16

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Today’s episode focuses on where pulses fit into a cattle ration. Some growers may be considering haying peas, lentils or chickpeas as a supplement to their nutrition program due to the drought conditions. We also talk about how pulse crops work from a relative value standpoint.

We are joined by Dr. Zac Carlson, the North Dakota State University Extension Beef Cattle Specialist based in Fargo. He just recently started in that position in June after finishing a masters and Ph.D. at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln focused on ruminant nutrition. 

“I think pulse crops have a very unique and distinct place when it comes to livestock feed. They certainly provide a high quality forage and a high protein grain that I think has a lot of value in the livestock industry.” - Zac Carlson, Ph.D.

This year’s severity of drought combined with low hay production has created a scarcity in forage for livestock. Some producers are decreasing their herd size to lighten the nutritional requirements for their operation but Dr. Carlson offers an additional option. Pulse crops can provide 20-25% crude protein as well as some additional energy as part of a livestock ration and so can be used as forage. Their unique abilities for nitrogen fixation do need to be taken into account before they are integrated into a ration. 

“Nitrates are our concern when it comes to grazing pulse crops. So it's just something to be aware of. It's definitely manageable...Having a light stocking rate helps with that as well as not grazing when the forage is wet….and making sure your cattle aren't hungry when they go out to these fields. ” - Zac Carlson, Ph.D.

Dr. Carlson highlights that when pulse crops are stressed, for example in a drought or unexpected frost, nitrate levels may be increased. He encourages anyone interested in grazing pulse crops to contact their county extension and discuss sending a sample of the pulse crop off for nitrate analysis. Increased levels can be managed but knowing the level of concern is very helpful.

“Obviously there's a valuable product there. And I really think considering how some of these might fit into a livestock diet and work through that are something pulse crop producers should consider.” - Zac Carlson, Ph.D.

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Zac Carlson, the North Dakota State University Extension Beef Cattle Specialist
  • Explore the uses of pulse crops as a forage or grazing supplement for livestock producers
  • Learn the special considerations producers should consider before using them in their ration


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Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture...

29 Apr 2021Including Pulses in a Rotation to Build Soil Health with Tony Wagner00:22:45

For the past 15 years, Tony Wagner has been on a journey to improve the soil health of his farmland, which runs the gamut from sandy to high clay. He’s located about 100 miles west of Fargo, so farther east than a lot of the North Dakota pulse growers, but he says they’ve worked well in his rotation. Tony shares how he got into pulses, why he’s stuck with them, how they fit into building soil health, and a really interesting project of planting peas with flax as a companion crop to try to keep them off the ground. Tony also talks about attempting two crops of peas in the same field. While the second crop succumbed to unexpected weather conditions, he was impressed with the benefit to the soil despite not having a harvestable second pea crop.

“The next year we put spring wheat on that ground and we pulled off on that type of soil, which is a very light soil, probably the best wheat that we've ever pulled off. And we did a soil test on it and the nitrogen was pretty high on that soil. So we decided to slowly start working into cover crops.” - Tony Wagner


Tony has continued to experiment with cover crops including with different varieties to see what provides the most benefit to his operation. Along with nitrogen benefits, he has observed much less wind and water erosion, improvement in areas of high salinity and better water infiltration. Tony admits that the benefits aren’t always easy to pencil and can take years to accumulate the advantages they offer. With decreased water requirements, decreased inputs and improved soil health, he is hooked and will continue his journey with cover crops and pulse crops. 


“From where I started off at, I wish I would have taken a picture. It literally didn't feel like we were getting anywhere at all. That was the biggest eye-opener. And now, I've got that drive to just keep doing what we're doing because visually it's working.” - Tony Wagner


One of the more recent practices Tony has been using was incorporating flax as a companion crop in with his field peas. He chose flax since the pre-emergence chemicals used are the same as field peas and would allow him to not spray anything after emergence. Field peas were prioritized at seeding with depths and rates optimized for their production. The flax companion crop did work and helped the peas stand but unfortunately the flax grew too well and would not die at time of harvest while the peas did. Tony says he would like to attempt this trial again but will look at different varieties going forward to see if the maturity timing can be better coordinated.


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Tony Wagner is a North Dakota farmer who joins us to explain his journey into pulse and cover crops
  • Discover the many benefits Tony has been able to realize on his operation with these practices
  • Explore the many varieties Tony has tried and what has been most successful for him

Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.



25 Apr 2022Value-Added Lentils with Shauna and Terry Farver of Farver Farms00:26:32

If you’ve ever thought that direct-to-consumer farm businesses are only for those located close to urban centers, this episode will challenge that thinking. Scobey, Montana is considered the second most middle-of-nowhere town in America. That’s where Terry grew up on the farm, and where he and Shauna have built their farm and business. Together they share about their journey on Farver Farms from farming to building their own farmer-direct brand of lentil snacks and mixes. 

“Our kids were getting ready to graduate from high school and talking about wanting to come back to the farm. As anyone in agriculture knows, there's only so many acres and only so many cows you can put on those acres or so much crop…So then the question became, how do we bring these two kids back and support two more families? And we knew that part of that was going to have to be off farm income.” - Shauna Farver


The Farver’s have developed and sell Lentil Crunchers as well as lentil-based cooking and baking mixes. This is a great story of finding creative ways to add value to a pulse crop marketing plan. It’s no easy undertaking, but it can be done. At the onset, Terry and Shauna pursued lentils as a part of the rotation to help with weed management.


“They didn't really have a good chemical yet for getting wild oats, which is a grass out of wheat, which is a grass. And growing a legume which is a lentil, they had a chemical that was very inexpensive and worked really well. So you go in on your wheat ground that has bad wild oats, you grow legumes or lentils, and you spray this chemical and all your wild oats are gone. And it does a really nice job. It's a really good rotation.” - Terry Farver


Like any new venture, they had to start with what they had and sort of figure it out on the fly to get established. From the initial task of production, they have expanded into direct-to-consumer lentil products. Once they started gaining some early traction it was time to increase their capacity so they could meet the demand they were creating. They also increased the number of products they offered. The Farvers estimate that in a normal year, they're still selling less than 10% of their lentil production through this food business, but it's working and it's growing. Shawna said there still is one main challenge though, that she sees for other aspiring value added farmers out there.


“Infrastructure, I think is probably our biggest barrier. I know that there's a group working on some infrastructure particularly related to food production here in the Eastern side of the state. And I'm anxious to see what happens there. That might make things a little easier….it doesn't mean it can't be overcome. It just takes a little creativity sometimes.” - Shauna Farver



This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Terry and Shauna Farver, owners of Farver Farms and developers of Lentil Crunchers.
  • Discover their journey into pulse crops and the evolution of an alternate source of income for their operation
  • Explore the pitfalls and successes they have experienced with their lentil products



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by

14 Jan 2021[Bonus] Panel on Pulse Grading00:35:28

Don’t forget to register today for the Northern Pulse Growers Association Annual Convention happening January 19th - 21st. You can get all the information over at www.NorthernPulse.com

In this panel we explore the advantages and challenges associated with the grading of pulse crops. While many producers grow frustrated by more criteria or hoops to jump through, our experts suggest that with careful management many times these can be used to the producers advantage by verifying the high standards US producers maintain.  

Our panel is hosted by Todd Schulz, the USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council Vice President of Research and Member Services.  Jillien Streit is a 5th generation farmer, owner of Sticks Ag and a part of the Montana Pulse Crop Committee. She actively participates in her processing plant in a food safety role and so provides us with a unique perspective from both sides of the crop. Jillien highlights the value the grading system adds to pulse crops throughout the supply chain. The president of Hinrichs Trading company, Phil Hinrichs, joins us to share his perspective from the processing side of the business. “Grading has definitely been a learning curve for the grower but obviously the process and the end user.” And lastly, Ryan Edinger joins us with AGT Foods. He has been with the company for 12 years and observed how the pulse industry has grown and evolved into new markets overtime. 

The first obstacle a producer might encounter is definitively defining quality for not only your end consumer but any person in the supply chain in between. Ryan shares that individual consumers are looking for different qualities in the crop. The marketability is largely defined by the buyer and supported but not defined by any one grading system. In the chickpea market, Phil shares that his operation largely relies on the USDA grade which can be affected by color and moisture value. He highlights that with chickpeas a lot of the value is placed in the physical appearance of the crop since there is minimal processing prior to reaching the end consumer. Jillien shares her personal focus of quality is in food safety. She also suggests that third party grading supplies a “baseline and standard for all parties in the transaction to gauge the product” and that pulse growers need to be able to balance both factors to provide the best quality. 

Phil strongly suggests allowing processors to do a final clean on the product. He doesn’t mind some residue being present when the crop is presented. The handling and evaluation of the crop is what they are experts at so he recommends allowing them to handle it to avoid any unnecessary trauma to the crop. Both Phil and Ryan recommend consistent monitoring and presenting a representative sample of each bin to the processor. In order to best market the crop, processors need to know the characteristics of the crop so getting a good representative sample whether good or bad will help them find the appropriate market for what the producer has. 

Cracked seed coats plague pulse growers. Jillien suggests that “high supply markets can breed very picky buyers.” She finds that there isn’t a consistent judgement of cracked seed coats and that supply and demand factors affect the tolerance of the farmer. On the producer level, she suggests monitoring the method of harvest, reducing movement of the product especially if it is cold and paying close attention to moisture levels. Ryan adds that different varieties can have stronger seed coats so paying attention to that initial selection can be of benefit. Jillien adds that even with a high level of cracked seed coats there is a market for the crop so still send a representative sample to the processor and be patient.  

MRL’s (Maximum Residue Limit)

03 Jun 2022The Mighty Mungbean with Arti Singh, Ph.D.00:23:59

Dr. Arti Singh joins us to talk about a lesser known pulse crop that is showing a lot of potential for increased commercial production in the U.S.. The mungbean, which has traditionally been grown for bean sprouts, is seeing increased demand due to its ideal properties for many plant-based proteins. 

“The mungbean is a very versatile crop when it comes to uses and the quality of protein. The market is just amazing right now it's opening up in all different directions. I see there is a lot more benefit in growing this crop which is right now in a minor stage.” - Dr. Arti Singh


Dr. Singh is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Agronomy at Iowa State University with more than 15 years of plant breeding experience. After obtaining her PhD degree from G.B. Pant University in India, she worked as a Postdoctoral fellow at the University of Saskatchewan and then at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada prior to joining Iowa State University. Her breeding program focused on developing new varieties for plant-based protein markets. Her research projects are geared towards harnessing genetic diversity for genetic gain, utilization of advanced data analytics particularly machine and deep learning for early disease and stress signatures, and genetic/genomic studies on abiotic and biotic stress resistance.


“I know farmers are very innovative and those growers who are looking for a new crop or they are looking to incorporate more diversity in their crop portfolio, please try mungbeans..This industry is going to grow…However, to reach there we’ll need a collective effort in industry, private and public, to bring this crop into the mainstream.” - Dr. Arti Singh


This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Arti Singh, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Agronomy at Iowa State University
  • Explore the mungbean and the potential benefits it offers US growers
  • Discover the research in plant breeding that Dr. Singh is involved in and the results they are producing


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.





20 Mar 2023Developing New Varieties of Pulses with Nonoy Bandillo, Ph.D.00:24:20

Dr. Nonoy Bandillo is an assistant professor and pulse crops breeder who directs the pulse crops breeding program at North Dakota State University. He says their ultimate goal at the program is to develop and release varieties that maximize economic return to producers and to provide high quality crops to the pulse crops industry. In this episode we discuss key challenges in pulse crops that are being addressed through genetics, some of the varieties that his program has released in the past, and some exciting new lines that are in the pipeline. 

“So the zero tannin lentil that we have in the pipeline, it doesn't have tannin or there's minimal tannin and it does not have any brownish color, which I would say, in my opinion, is not really a good characteristic of the seed of lentil.” - Dr. Nonoy Bandillo

Over the years of the NDSU breeding program, there have been several milestones, but perhaps most importantly, the release of four new cultivars. As these cultivars get released, it does take a while for them to be available commercially. ND Crown for example, was released in 2020, but there should finally be enough seed this year to be available for farmers.The program also has an additional eight lines in the pre-release phase of the pipeline. Disease resistance, yield, protein content and flavor remain high priorities for pulse crop breeding programs going forward. Nonoy and other plant breeders work extremely closely with plant pathologists to understand the mechanisms for disease resistance and to try to understand how to develop varieties accordingly.

“Our goal is to always collaborate with multiple breeders, not just within the US, but all around the world to get new sources of germ plasm or materials that we can use for the program… I feel like collaboration always starts with figuring out the important biological question that should be highly relevant to producers.” -Dr. Nonoy Bandillo

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Dr. Nonoy Bandillo an assistant professor and pulse crops breeder who directs the pulse crops breeding program at North Dakota State University
  • Explore the strategy, purpose and effect of the ongoing research towards new pulse crop cultivars
  • Discover the vast collaborative efforts throughout the industry to produce better cultivars for both the market and producers


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

13 Mar 2020Welcome to Growing Pulse Crops!00:01:08

Today we introduce you to this brand new podcast focused on growing pulses like field peas, chickpeas and lentils. 

The purpose of this show is to follow some pulse crop farmers through the growing season and to dive into the research that’s helping them through some of the challenges they face. We’ll also talk to a number of other industry stakeholders along the way. 

Demand for these nutrient-dense, high-protein foods continues to grow. There is also interest from farmers to include more pulses into diverse rotations for benefits like nitrogen fixation and soil health. 

But the industry continues to face challenges, and we are eager to address these head on. So if you’re a pulse grower or in any way interested in these important crops, hit subscribe and stay tuned for future episodes. We’ll be back with plenty of information about challenges pulse farmers are facing throughout the U.S. and what solutions are working. 

This episode is just a teaser for what’s to come, but I have a bonus clip that I should I would share with you. Please make sure you are subscribed on your podcast player for many more great episodes to come!

18 Sep 2023Harvest Considerations with Montana Farmer Terry Angvick00:28:20

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Terry Angvick farms in Sheridan County, Montana which is in the extreme Northeastern corner of the state. He was born, raised there and came back after earning a plant and soil science degree from Montana State University. In his first career, he spent 31 years as the Sheridan County Extension Agent, a position he retired from in 2010. Today he farms mostly durum and dry peas alongside his two older brothers and his son. Terry shares about the important role pulse crops play in rotations in his arid part of the country, some of his management practices that he’s adopted over the past 20 years of growing pulses, and some harvest and post-harvest considerations. 

“I think the more residue out there, it prevents erosion, but it also creates a little microclimate, a little environment, for them to grow up into. I prefer a furrow drill…because I think it also allows that little microclimate when you grow up on the stubble. These varieties have tendrils that tie them together, and so that helps to hold them upright as well. In my mind, the more stubble the better.” - Terry Angvick

As an extension agent Terry found himself “searching for something that would justify the economics of farming.” This led him to encourage the planting of previously fallow fields and pursuing different types of crop rotations such as pulse crops.

“When you produce a durum crop following a pulse crop, you almost always have increased yield and quality as opposed to continuous wheat. For example, better protein, better color. Durum has HVAC, which is a hard vitreous amber color, which is a nice yellow color. It's almost always better. So from those standpoints, I guess the pulse crops have really fitted very well and the markets have followed it as well.” - Terry Angvick

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet Terry Angvick from Sheridan County, Montana who farms durum and dry peas alongside his two older brothers and son.
  • Explore the new practices Terry has started to compliment the pulse crops he has added to his rotation 



Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.


09 Feb 2023Pulses and Soil Health with Paul Overby00:25:59

Over the past 15 years Paul Overby has converted his North Dakota farm to no-till, added zone management for nutrient management, diversified his rotations and added cover crops. He shares his journey toward building healthier soils, the importance of pulse crops in his rotation, and his recent experiences with growing pea/canola intercrop. Overby had already started growing peas before he decided to make the switch to no-till, but his interest in pulses grew as he started to understand the benefits they can have on not only economics but on his soil health program as well.

“We did bring the peas in as a way of labor management, planting and harvesting early. And there was a market. Dakota Dry Bean at the time did have a pea market, so that was relatively close by and easy to ship into…. And then as we got into the whole soil health side of things, then having peas in a rotation started switching for other reasons. Some of the value in having them in the rotation started showing up as we started learning about arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.” -Paul Overby

Whether it’s as a primary crop, in an intercrop or as a cover crop, Overby sees pulses as an important part of his rotation and something to consider for anyone who wants to build healthier soils. Always on the hunt for new ideas to improve his farm, he observed what others were doing in intercropping. This led to a pea/canola intercrop experiment of his own last year.


“Canola and brassicas are not mycorrhizal associated plants, peas are. Is there a synergy there? Can you put peas under the soil and, and help out the canola that way? So this past year, we did a trial. We had two strips in a canola field where we had peas interceded with the canola.” - Paul Overby

This Week on Growing Pulse Crops:

  • Meet farmer Paul Overby and hear about his journey into no till, pulse crops and intercropping techniques
  • Understand Overby’s experience with cover crops and water infiltration and how that encouraged him to explore no till and pulse crops
  • Explore the soil health benefits Overby found beyond water infiltration from the pulse crops he has used


Growing Pulse Crops Podcast is hosted by Tim Hammerich of the Future of Agriculture Podcast.

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