Agrovista launches Virtual 360 Tour of Lamport AgX trials

  • Growers across the country can obtain a detailed insight into the ground-breaking work being undertaken at Agrovista’s flagship trial site, Lamport AgX, via a new virtual 360°online tour

The Northamptonshire site, previously known as Project Lamport, is a major resource examining how rotations, cover cropping and regenerative agriculture principles can interact to improve soil health, while delivering commercially viable crops and maintaining blackgrass at manageable levels.

Agrovista marketing manager Chris Okane said: “The virtual tour is open to all growers, whether they are Agrovista customers or not, and is the next best thing to visiting the actual site. It allows visitors to navigate around the various cropping systems at Lamport AgX to give a more interactive feel.

“The work we are carrying out at Lamport AgX contains important pointers as to how arable farming will evolve over the next few years, to help growers meet head on the technical and environmental challenges that lie ahead.

“Due to the covid uncertainty earlier this summer, many growers were uncomfortable at the thought of visiting an event and we also had to restrict visitor numbers.

“This new initiative will enable as wide an audience as possible to access some of the key sector-leading findings at Lamport AgX.”

The tour kicks off with an in-depth explanation from head of soil heath Chris Martin on optimum soil management at the site. He uses results from Agrovista’s comprehensive Gold Soil Health report, which is now available to growers to help them make informed management decisions and improve overall soil functionality.

Several different systems are then examined with farming systems research and development adviser Niall Atkinson. He starts by looking at various options to reintroduce winter wheat into the Lamport rotation, which has been dominated by cover crop/spring cropping sequences over the past eight years to help control blackgrass and deliver profitable crops.

A section on optimum cover crop establishment includes broadcasting seed into the preceding standing crop several weeks before harvest, offering crucial additional weeks to help soils reap the full benefits. Cultivations to aid conventional cover crop establishment, as well as comparisons with fallow plots, also feature.

Other highlights include a session with technical manager Mark Hemmant testing regenerative agriculture principles in spring-drilled wheat after a cover crop, to see how they might fit in to conventional systems.