HAVANA, Ill. — Drone technology is increasing in its applicability in improving farm operations.
Kevin Brooks, University of Illinois Extension farm business management and marketing educator serving Fulton, Mason, Peoria and Tazewell counties, uses drones to assist local farmers with issues and provides practical advice on how to efficiently and effectively use a drone on the farm.
Crop plant health varies throughout the growing season depending on conditions in the field.
Driving or walking along a field edge shows what is going on where one can see, but it is not as helpful in monitoring what is happening further in a field. Drones, on the other hand, can help farm producers monitor an entire field.
In a particular field, there are many different soil types that can cause a crop variety to act differently in one area than another. Weed, pest and disease pressures also vary across a field.
“The key to efficiently using a drone in the farm operation is to quickly identify problem areas in the field and then do a more in depth look at the situation,” Brooks said.
“In a 160-acre field area, doing a quick look from 200 feet in the air shows a lot about conditions. The pilot can then fly the drone lower and examine the crop more closely.”
In many instances, the closer look provides a good view of conditions. For example, if a small area of an invasive weed species or disease is noted, the pilot can mark the location using Real Time Kinematic position technology and go to the exact spot in the field.
If using position technology, which is less precise than RTK, a general area of the field may be noted for spraying instead.
“There are a lot of potential uses on the farm. Wet spots needing drainage or nitrogen deficiencies are just a few examples of what can be seen from the air. The drones can be simple machines for quick looks or more sophisticated for highly detailed maps,” Brooks said.
He also uses Extension farm drones to monitor overall field health.
“Using platforms such as Drone Deploy or Agremo can give the farmer an overall view of the field for problems and will do valuable crop plant population stand counts. Taking a stand count doesn’t take a lot of time. An in depth look at an entire field, however, can take considerable time to map for overall conditions. On a 160-acre field, a farmer might only want to detail known problem areas noted in a basic overview flight,” he said.
“Mapping an entire field with high detail can result in an autonomously flying drone taking thousands of photos. These photos are stitched together into one map. This mapping step for an 80-acre field can take nearly an hour. Additionally, the after-flight work of uploading photos can take as long as it does to fly the map route.”