| Cereals
S.J. Stanberry & Sons Highest spends don't
necessarily mean
at Cereals 2016
highest yields
Visit SJ Stanberry & Sons Ltd at the Cereals two day
event on 15th & 16th June 2016 at Chrishall Grange, Nr
Duxford, Cambridgeshire.
stablished in
1980, SJ
Stanberry &
Sons Ltd have
built an enviable
reputation for
their concrete flooring services
that are offered nationwide.
SJ Stanberry’s have vast
experience of laying concrete
floors for aprons, sheds, grain
stores, silos, foundations,
anaerobic digestion tank bases
and much more.
We have been offering our
concrete services to customers
for many years and we work
hard to hone our skills and
improve our knowledge and
methods in order to provide a
fast, dedicated and reliable
service.
Our services include:
• Industrial, agricultural or
commercial concrete flooring
• Internal or external
E
• Steel fixing
• Brush, tamp or power float
finishes
• Anaerobic digestion tank
bases
• Aprons & shed floors
• Grain, potato & machinery
stores
• Poultry units & stable yards
• Paths, patios and driveways
• Groundworks & preparation
• Free site visits, material advice
and costing.
SJ Stanberry’s have vast
experience of laying concrete
floors
Visit us at the Cereals event
for a friendly chat in regards to
your requirements or call us on
01945 870 076 for a free, noobligation quote, site visit or
brochure.
34 | Farming Monthly | May 2016
Challenging disease scenarios’ with rising input costs are
a grower’s biggest challenge to margins this year – but do
they need to be? This is the over-riding message from the
AICC at this year’s Cereals Event.
f you are spending
way over £100 per
hectare on your
cereal fungicide
programme you
need to ask the
question if this is money well
spent, or if levels of disease
control and yields alike could have
been maintained with less
expense, says Sean Sparling,
AICC.
At the AICC stand this year, a
range of spring and winter crop
plots will demonstrate how it is
possible to maintain yields whilst
managing inputs at realistic costs.
The question will be posed as to
whether farmers are best served
by allowing best practice and
good science to be the driver for
production rather than highest
spend.
I
AICC will be running pop-in
sessions at 11am and 2pm each
day to discuss the visible
differences in programmes
demonstrated by the plots.
What will be the impact of
European legislation on arable
growers in 2020 and what would it
look like? By 2020 we could be
faced with an environment in
which a number of active
substances will be lost to the
market and product choice will be
more limited. Visitors to the stand
this year will get to see the first
hand the startling effects of the
impact of this legislation on the
fungicide toolbox – seeing is
believing the real threat that the
industry currently faces.
www.farmingmonthly.co.uk