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Bean and gone
Sporting Shooter
|October 2020
Andy Crow and cousin Gary are out shooting over stubbles – standard for this time of year! It’s a slow start, but some lumpy ground and a bean bonanza leads to a fantastic result
Andy Crow loves shooting over beans. “I’ve had my biggest ever bag of pigeons on bean stubbles and lots of very memorable ones over the years. This is a food source that is energy-dense and very high in protein, not to mention easy to find and fill a crop with. No wonder pigeons are really ‘on them’ at times.”
Andy is at a farm in Kent where the beans were sown during the terribly wet period last autumn. “It was so difficult to get on the ground. They ended up ploughing the beans in and then aiming to go over it with a press, but they never got the chance. The result is basically a ploughed field with beans growing in it!”
Fast forward to this summer and the conditions have evolved from flood to near drought. As a result of the dry growing season, the stunted bean plants are between 12 and 24 in height with the majority of the pods very low to the ground.
Modern harvest machinery is pretty sophisticated, but these factors, combined with rough, rock hard and uneven ground make combining them efficiently a near impossibility. To the farmer’s chagrin, the majority of the beans ended up on the dirt rather than in the harvester’s tank. Mind you, the local pigeon population was certainly not complaining, with the grey hordes pouring in from the surrounding area to feast on the beany bounty.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2020-Ausgabe von Sporting Shooter.
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