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Hail Simulator Brings Back Memories Of “The Soybean Zapper”
When we saw photos recently of a “hail simulator” that consists of chains and golf balls mounted on a rotating drum, it brought back memories of a front-page FARM SHOW story about a “Soybean Zapper” that appeared back in 1983 (Vol. 7, No. 1)
  The newly developed hail simulator was built by Farming Smarter, a Lethbridge, Alberta research company, to inflict damage on crops in order to evaluate recovery times for different plant varieties. Drum speed is variable and it can be raised or lowered to inflict from 0 to 100 percent damage to crops.
  The Soybean Zapper, on the other hand, was built by farmer Victor Zoellick of Rockford, Ill., to intentionally inflict up to 30 percent damage to standing soybean crops in order to stimulate growth and produce higher yields. Zoellick had noticed that after hail storms “zapped” his bean fields, they often came back stronger than ever. He experimented for several years in a greenhouse before taking his machine to the field. It used spinning rubber straps to inflict up to 30 percent crop damage, stripping leaves from all around the canopy but without damaging the stem. He found that the best time to zap beans was when the first blossoms appeared and plants were at 10 to 14 in. tall. Generally, he found it took about 2 weeks for crops to recover but he said they’d come back stronger than ever, with a stronger stem, a larger canopy, more nodules on the roots, and more pods.
  At the time of our story, Zoellick and other farmers who had tested the machine claimed it boosted yields 10 to 15 percent.
  Agronomists we talked to at the time of our original story said the theory behind Zoellick’s machine was sound if you could open the canopy at the top of the crop without damaging the stem. But they said it would be difficult to build such a machine.
  The Soybean Zapper never really found a market. Nor did another similar machine developed separately at the time by an Illinois agri services company. (You can read the original article at our website www.farmshow.com).
  For more information on the hail simulating machine developed by Farming Smarter, contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Ken Coles, Farming Smarter, no. 100, 5401-1st Ave. South, Lethbridge, Alberta Canada T1J 4V6 (ph 403 317-0022; www.farmingsmarter.com).



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2016 - Volume #40, Issue #6