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Huma Gro® farming products increase yields; bring life into the soil; reduce soil salinity; treat chemical damage and water damage from flooding; stimulate plant growth; and strengthen plants against pests and disease. Farmers in
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Huma Gro X-Tend: Organic Acid Product
A 6-2-0 Liquid Carbon Formulation for improving fertilizer efficiency in the soil. When added to other products, X-Tend acts as a carrier. Get more from your fertilizer with X-Tend.
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Effects of Huma® Products on N & P Stabilization in Sandy Soil
Objective To demonstrate the effects of Huma® products X-Tend®, Fertil Humus®, Fertil Soil®, and Zap® on the reduction of nitrogen and phosphorus leaching in Immokalee sandy soils. Background The leaching of nitrogen and phosphate fertilizers presents an ongoing problem in Florida soils. Agricultural amendments that reduce leaching when applied to soils or when mixed with...
Huma® Products on Sugar Cane Result in 14x Less P and 32x Less K Required, Plus Increased Yield and Net Return
Background Humates and plant growth stimulators can positively influence a crop such as sugar cane to produce a higher yield. Objective The focus of this study was to observe how fall application of Huma® products Fertil Soil®, a source of soil nutrients and humates, and Breakout®, which stimulates growth, would affect sugar cane production. The...
Huma® X-Tend® Compared with Agrotain® on Rice Production in Southern Missouri
Introduction Nitrogen loss through volatilization begins to occur immediately after application unless the urea is stabilized. Agrotain® has been the industry standard for urea stabilization. In 2011, at Shoffner Farm Research, a trial was established to compare Agrotain® and the Huma® product X-Tend® to increase nitrogen use efficiency and rice yield (using the CL 151...
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Arizona Agribusiness Roundtable
We at BHN/Huma Gro® were very pleased to be a sponsor for the Arizona Agribusiness Roundtable on December 4 at the PERA Club in Tempe. This year’s roundtable was titled, “A National Perspective on Agriculture: The Farm Bill and You.” The Agribusiness Roundtable is a collaborative effort by the Arizona Department of Agriculture and the...
This Week in Ag #35
Last week I was a guest on the TopSoil Webinar series hosted by Mitchell Hora of Continuum Ag (you can check it out here). I mentioned how western growers seem further along in their regenerative agriculture journey. That’s largely driven by regional attitudes and the food companies, who have pledged to sell products grown using regen ag practices. This has motivated growers of crops such as potatoes, onions, apples, and blueberries to hasten their adoption. But in the Heartland, where commodity crops fill the landscape, these growers have lacked many of the market-driven economic incentives. Until now.
This Week in Ag #38
When you’re carving your Halloween pumpkins this week, be sure to thank a bee. That’s because pumpkins are not self-pollinating plants. Unlike cotton and soybeans, where pollen produced within a flower fertilizes the ovary of the same flower on the same plant, pumpkins have specific male and female flowers across their vines. So they need bees to carry pollen between the flowers. Pumpkin growers will rent bee colonies during the growing season to ensure better pollination and higher yields.