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[{"order":1,"question":"Do you work with broadacre farms in Albany–Yakamia and the wider Great Southern?","answer":"Yes. We support broadacre growers in Albany, Yakamia (WA 6330) and across the Great Southern. Engagements typically include:\n\n- Pre‑season planning for rotations, varieties, and input strategies.\n- In‑season crop walks at key growth stages with timely phone/text support during spray and weather windows.\n- Post‑harvest reviews to refine next season’s plan.\n\nBeing local means our advice reflects regional realities like coastal influences, frost risk pockets, and staggered April–June seeding opportunities."}, {"order":2,"question":"What agronomy services do you actually provide for broadacre cropping?","answer":"Our consultancy focuses on practical, on‑farm decisions for broadacre systems:\n\n- Weed control programs: herbicide selection and sequencing, mode‑of‑action rotation, and fallow strategies.\n- Pest and disease monitoring with thresholds and timely intervention plans.\n- Nutrition planning: soil/tissue testing coordination, rate recommendations, and in‑season adjustments.\n- Spray planning and stewardship: water rates, adjuvants, nozzle selection, and drift management.\n- Seasonal planning and reviews: budgets, input timing, and risk management.\n\nOur goal is to translate best practice into field‑ready decisions for your paddocks."}, {"order":3,"question":"How do you handle herbicide resistance and ensure programs are compliant and effective?","answer":"We build programs that are both practical and compliant:\n\n- Resistance management: rotate HRAC modes of action, use double‑knock and cultural tactics where appropriate, and prioritise early, timely control.\n- Compliance and safety: follow APVMA label directions, and align with DPIRD/GRDC best‑practice guidance.\n- Application quality: match nozzle, water volume, and droplet size to the job; schedule around delta‑T and inversion risk to minimise drift.\n- Local context: account for Albany–Yakamia peri‑urban buffers, waterways, and neighbour considerations.\n\nWe also encourage good record‑keeping so decisions are auditable and repeatable."}, {"order":4,"question":"Can you tailor recommendations to my soil type and rotation in the Great Southern?","answer":"Yes. We tailor advice to local sandplain, duplex, gravelly loam, and heavier soil types common in the Great Southern, and to typical wheat–barley–canola–lupin rotations. That can include:\n\n- Targeted soil and tissue testing with zone‑based interpretation.\n- Nutrition programs, including lime/gypsum recommendations where indicated by tests.\n- Rotation planning to manage weeds, disease, and residue.\n- Timing and input adjustments for coastal vs. inland conditions.\n\nThe result is a program that fits your paddocks, not a generic recipe."}, {"order":5,"question":"What does onboarding look like and how do we get started?","answer":"A typical onboarding looks like this:\n\n1. Discovery call to understand your goals, area, and current challenges.\n2. On‑farm visit around Albany–Yakamia to walk key paddocks and review maps/history.\n3. Scope and proposal outlining visit frequency, deliverables, and support level (seasonal program or ongoing advisory).\n4. Kick‑off plan with a clear calendar for planning, crop walks, and reviews.\n\nFor a conversation and availability, contact us via agronomy.com.au. We’ll provide a transparent proposal aligned to your season and risk profile."}]