Weekend warriors are using drones
to impress buddies at the lake, and eight-year-olds can maneuver a tiny craft
around siblings sitting at a dinner table, so it’s no surprise that farmers are on the drone bandwagon. As this company says, the new “Pocket Drone Control” tool
provides aerial insights to check on weather or pest damage in distant fields,
and growers can also decide what fertilizer to apply. Apparently, farmers can make
a few swipes on an iPhone or iPad (they just need to be careful they’re not on
Tinder), and the pocket drone can cover an 80-acre field in less than 15
minutes.
Another cutting-edge company points
out that the
current revolution is being fueled not only by advancements in drone platforms,
but by improved sensors as well. “Drones are everywhere in the agricultural
landscape and are being used to determine plant health, inventory plants,
collect farm asset information, assess crop damage, and even determine areas of
low soil moisture.” I imagine the upgraded models can also zip off at noon and
pick up sandwiches at the Country Vittles store on Main Street. “What! I wanted
my BLT on rye not pumpernickel.” Farmers will need to take their leather work
gloves off when they use the touch pad to order.
This is certainly an upgrade from
the old days. Dad’s crop reports would come from windshield surveys while he
drove the country roads or from a friendly neighbor’s not-so-subtle observations. “That
corn on your back forty looks burnt and stressed. You might want to give it
some attention or you may as well turn those scrawny cattle of yours loose in
it.”
Livestock auctions were "massive databases" back then. |
We kids might have some insights after walking soybean fields to pull
weeds, but we were focused more on avoiding painful thistles and dirt clods
thrown by a cousin eight rows over. Dad considered us unreliable sources: “I
never sent you boys to check conditions in the cornfields ‘cause I didn’t know
if you were smart enough to find your way out.”
NOTE: Check this blog for more links about ag drones and a reflection about being a kid on the farm before drones.
NOTE: Click here for information about CAST's forthcoming series of issue papers: The Need for Agricultural Innovation to Sustainably Feed the World by 2050.
This series looks at specific programs, policies, and techniques that will advance global food security. Topics will include issues in animal agriculture, food science, and crops and soils. Led by teams of experts, the Ag Innovation series focuses on smart science and intelligent innovation—the dramatic changes needed to accelerate productivity in crop and animal systems while reducing negative impacts on the environment. CAST will present the work to policymakers, corporate leaders, government officials, NGOs, students, stakeholder groups, and the general public.
by dan gogerty (top pic from precisiondrone.jpg, bottom one from web.missouri.edu)
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