Strip Tillage in Onions: Lorin Grigg Video

A farmer explains how strip tillage and cover crops help protect onion seedlings from wind erosion in sandy soils.

Laptop with video screenshot superimposed.

On his irrigated farm near Quincy, Washington, Lorin Grigg uses strip-planted wheat cover crops and spring strip-tillage to shield onion and sweet corn seedlings from windblown sand. The case study traces how Grigg and his father developed the system, adjusted cover crop types and planting dates, and modified equipment to balance wind protection with the need for a clean seedbed. It describes benefits including reduced wind erosion and replanting risk, improved water infiltration, and less runoff, along with challenges involving variable residue, planting equipment, weeds, and onion diseases associated with cereal cover crops. Sidebars summarize research on Rhizoctonia-related onion stunting, glyphosate timing, and fungicide applications. Grigg presents cover cropping as a form of insurance and emphasizes continual experimentation, travel, and learning from other growers.

This publication is part of an archive and may not meet current digital accessibility standards. CSANR is working to improve digital accessibility of all materials. If you need this content in an alternative format, please contact csanr@wsu.edu.

Authors

McGuire, A. and Yorgey, G.

Related Products

Related Project

Year Published

2018

Areas of Focus

Agricultural Practices and Climate & Environment

Topics

Crops, Production Systems, and Soils & Fertility

Collaborator

Funding Source