Crusting Problems
Dave Franzen
NDSU Extension Soil Scientist
HTML Editors: Jochum
Wiersma & Tracy
Allrich

Soil crusting results from rains breaking down
soil aggregates into particles that cement into hard
layers at the soil surface when drying occurs
rapidly.
In soils that have not been seeded,
the crust prevents further soil drying by
sealing off the muddy
underlying soil from the air. The crust also
reflects sunlight, causing cooler soil temperatures that also slow drying.
Crusts in unseeded
fields can be broken by working the fields
very shallow, no deeper than the depth
of the crust, with such tools as a rotary hoe, a field
cultivator with narrow shovels or spikes, or a rigid
harrow.
Breaking the crust will help dry the field
more quickly and warm the soil. Some
compaction will result from the extra trip over the field,
but the benefits of the tillage should
outweigh the negatives.
In seeded
fields that received
heavy rains after seeding and
developed
crusts, breaking the crusts may be crucial for good
stand establishment and
to avoid reseeding.
A rotary hoe is the best tool for breaking a crust.
A spring-tooth harrow with the teeth set straight down
instead of slanted
back can sometimes be used. The circular
motion of harrow teeth set in this fashion can be very effective at breaking a
crust enough for young seedlings to emerge. A
heavy rigid harrow should
be avoided as
too much soil movement may expose seedling
roots.
If neither of these tools is available, running over the field
with and empty double
disc drill
will also break the crust.
The goal of any crust-breaking trip is to crack the crust into small pieces
and move them around
slightly to let air and light into the soil
below. Seedlings trapped
under a crust will try to grow and
elongate below the crust until they run out of stored
energy from the seed.
The cooler the weather, the longer the seedling
can survive, unless a seedling disease
infects it. The warmer the temperature, the faster the seedling
will try to grow and the sooner it will run
out of energy. It is important to deal with
crusts soon after they form.
With any crust-breaking method, some stand
damage is possible. However, compared
to the damage a crust can do,
the damage done
while breaking crust is usually much less than the crust itself causes.
Minnesota Association
of Wheat Growers
MAWG
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