cereal rye and hairy vetch mix |
USDA Risk
Management Agency (RMA) has issued Cover Crops, a new two-page fact sheet that helps to resolve
confusion over allowable deadlines for termination of cover crops to qualify
the subsequent crop in the field for crop insurance.
What is a cover crop? For insurance purposes, a cover crop is a
crop generally recognized by agricultural experts as agronomically sound for
the area for erosion control or other purposes related to conservation or soil
improvement.
Can I insure a crop following a cover crop? Yes, you may if you meet certain conditions for
terminating the cover crop. You must terminate the cover crop before the
deadline listed in the Natural Resources Conservation Service’s (NRCS) Cover
Crop Termination Guidelines for Non-Irrigated Cropland. If you do not terminate
the cover crop your commercial crop may be considered double cropped. If the
double cropping practice is not available in your county, your commercial crop
may not be insurable.
RMA is revising its procedures for cover
crops and the deadline for terminating cover crops. The deadlines are located
in NRCS’ Cover Crop Termination Guidelines for Non-Irrigated Cropland.
These guidelines also include allowances for
weather conditions, local climate, and topography, as well as advances in cover
crop technology. More guidance for cover crops can be found in RMA’s Special
Provisions of Insurance for Cover Crops. We expect these new procedures to be
in place starting in the fall of 2013 for the 2014 crop year. Termination of
cover crops that are used in an irrigated cropping system are not restricted to
a given cover crop termination zone. The cover crop should be terminated based
on the crop system and conservation, but before the planted crop emerges.
Why should I plant a cover crop? USDA
has developed the best and most comprehensive guidance possible for cover
crops. RMA, NRCS, and Farm Service Agency (FSA) cover crop experts were
involved in an interagency cover crop workgroup to develop cover crop
management guidelines across the U.S. NRCS has used information from the
workgroup, technical literature available, and experts’ knowledge of national
and local cover crop systems to develop cover crop management guidelines.
If you plant cover crops you may improve:
·
Soil quality
·
Nutrient cycling
·
Nitrogen production
·
Erosion control
·
Weed management
·
Soil water availability
Federal crop insurance policies now use the NRCS
guidelines for cover crop farming practices.
buckwheat |
How do I find the deadlines for terminating
my cover crop? The timing of cover crop termination is
critical in areas where poor timing of termination uses soil water that is
vital for commercial crop growth and yield. However, the specific date and
stage of growth requirements that were in RMA procedures led to some acreage
losing coverage in years where weather may have blocked your effort to either
terminate or harvest the cover crop in time to qualify for insurance coverage.
RMA termination requirements also may not have allowed you to gain the full
conservation benefits of the cover crop practice you were using.
Recognizing the advances and added benefits of cover crop
practices, and trying to provide more flexibility in the face of changing
conditions, RMA revised its cover crop procedures by employing new guidelines.
Now, you will determine the recommended termination time for a cover crop by
using the NRCS
Cover Crop Termination Guidelines for Non-Irrigated Cropland. You can also
find more information about cover crops and commercial crop insurability in
your county
Special Provisions. Once you reach
the site, click on the drop down menus in order to choose the year, your crop,
your state, and your county. All relevant information for your crop, including
information on cover crops, is available.
How does it work? The
new guidelines provide recommended termination periods for cover crops to
achieve conservation benefits and to minimize risk of yield reduction in the
following crop due to soil water use. Four cover crop termination zones were
established across the United States to identify the proper cover crop
management due to variability in climate and cropping systems in those areas.
For example, it recommends that farmers in:
· Zone 1 (largely arid to semi-arid regions in
the Western US) terminate cover crops 35 days or earlier before planting their
main crop;
· Zone 2, moving to the east, recommends 15 days
or earlier before planting;
· Zone 3 recommends on or before planting;
· Zone 4 covering a large portion of the
Eastern U.S., recommends at planting or within 5 days after planting, but before
crop emergence.
Can I use grazing as a form of terminating
the crop? No,
grazing is not considered terminating the cover crop.
Where to Buy Crop Insurance All multi-peril crop insurance,
including Catastrophic Risk Protection policies, are available from private
insurance agents. A list of crop insurance agents is available at all USDA service
centers
and on the RMA web site at www3.rma.usda.gov/apps/agents/
Contact Us USDA/RMA, Mail Stop
0801 1400 Independence Ave., SW Washington, DC 20250, (202) 690-2803, rma.cco@rma.usda.gov
No comments:
Post a Comment