Switching barley varieties leads to better profits in Norfolk

Spring malting barley is the most profitable cereal crop on one north Norfolk farm and in a bid to improve returns further just one new high-yielding variety is being grown.

The barley crop outpaces even winter wheat in profit terms and for next season the farm will reflect a big change underway in spring malting varieties nationwide.

See also: Video: Spring malting barley harvest kicks off in Norfolk

Tom Dye, managing director of Albanwise Farming, is growing the dual-purpose variety Laureate, which can satisfy the needs of brewers and distillers alike.

Dual-purpose variety

Farming traditional light north Norfolk malting barley and sugar beet land, he will put all of his 230ha spring barley land into this variety rather than fellow dual-purpose varieties Odyssey or Concerto, or even the brewer’s old favourite Propino.

He grew all Odyssey in 2015, switched to an Odyssey-Laureate split in 2016 and then to all Laureate in 2017 and plans the same again in spring 2018.

“The Laureate simply out-yielded the Odyssey by half a tonne a hectare and Propino by a quarter of a tonne,” he tells Farmers Weekly.

In 2017, his Laureate yielded an average 7.39t/ha in a tricky season for growing malting barley, and at a price of just over £150/t this gave him a gross margin of £848/ha to put winter wheat and even oilseed rape in the shade.

Year of change 

Bob King, commercial director of Crisp Malting, sees 2018 as a year of change for barley varieties with maltsters moving towards Planet for sole brewing use and those favouring dual-purpose varieties moving towards Laureate.

Crisp, which is the biggest buyer of malting barley in East Anglia, expects its buying strategy to move from a 55%-45% Odyssey-Concerto split in 2017 to a 70%-30% Laureate-Concerto ratio in 2018, and may move further in favour of Laureate in the future.

“If the 2018 Laureate does well and there is customer demand for it, then we could see 100% of our contracts for Laureate by 2019,” he says.

Tom Rivett, of grain merchants H Banham, based near Fakenham, who co-ordinates many of the contracts to supply Crisp says he is also seeing a big switch in varieties for 2018.

“We have seen a massive swing toward Laureate and away from Odyssey and Concerto,” he says.

Tom Dye, Bob King and Tom Rivett © David Jones/RBI

Scottish distillers

The maltster Crisp targets grain nitrogen of below 1.6% as it supplies Scottish distillers with top quality low-nitrogen malt, but it can also supply malt to brewers.

Mr Dye is still to deliver his grain from the 2017 harvest but says his crop looks around 1.6% nitrogen or just below, although it was a difficult growing season when heavy June rain caused many crops to lodge.

His spring barley fits neatly into a six-year rotation following sugar beet, which is often lifted late in the season to maximise yields on the 1,950ha arable unit at Green Farm, Saxlingham, three miles west of Holt. The full rotation includes sugar beet, spring barley, oilseed rape, winter wheat, vining peas and then winter wheat.

Land is ploughed after sugar beet, tine cultivated in the spring and then disc drilled usually in March when the land is warm enough. The crop drilled at 310-320 seeds/sq m.

“We need to get the crop up and growing and avoid any late frost as any loss of vigour leads to a loss of yield,” says Mr Dye.

Quality grain 

Nutrition is key for malting barley with the amount of nitrogen applied obviously important for yield, while the split and timing of the fertiliser is key for quality grain.

Spring nitrogen is applied at 140kg/ha, with half spread just after drilling and the remaining half at the 4-5 leaf stage. Some 80kg/ha of phosphate and potash are applied pre-emergence.

“The timing of the nutrition is key as the worst thing we can do is to apply nitrogen going into a drought phase,” he says.

A little and often approach is taken on spraying with typically three fungicide and two herbicide applications used post emergence.

harvesting spring barley

© David Jones/RBI

Lack of moisture 

Normally, the biggest problem with spring barley on the farm is a lack of moisture in May and June for this shallow-rooting crop on light Norfolk land, but last year the late June weather caused the biggest headache.

Just when the crop was at its heaviest, northerly winds and 40mm of rain in less than 48 hours put most of the Laureate on the ground, although a drier month in July did help the crop recover before harvest, which took place in the second week of August.

This has not put off Mr Dye from growing Laureate in spring 2018 as it stands and yields better than Concerto and Odyssey. The only minor concern is that the variety is slightly later maturing than Concerto.

In yield terms, the difference is significant as on the current AHDB Recommended List, as Laureate outyields Concerto by 10%, and by 11% in eastern England.

However, Mr Dye is not fully wedded to Laureate as he manages three other farms in West Norfolk, East Yorkshire and also North Yorkshire and here he grows brewing varieties Planet and Propino and specialist grain distilling variety Olympus.

Farm costings of spring barley grown in 2017

Inputs    Costs (£/ha)
Seed       58
Sprays         69
Fertiliser       163
Variable costs  290
  • This gives a gross margin of £848/ha at a yield of 7.39t/ha. 

Barley varieties from the AHDB 2018/19 Recommended List

  Laureate Planet Propino Concerto Odyssey
Fungicide-treated yield   104  105   100    94   (98)
Eastern region yield     105  105    98    94  (100)
Resistance to lodging     7    7     7     6   (6)
Ripening     +1    0    -1     0   (0)

Ripening (+/- Concerto, -ve = earlier)

() not directly comparable as Odyssey data is from the 2017/2018 Recommended List whereas all other data is from the 2018/19 list.

ABC Group  

Around 220 barley growers in Norfolk are members of the ABC growers group, producing malting barley under long-term contracts targeting low-nitrogen grain.

The ABC group links two grain merchants – Adams & Howling and H Banham – with maltster Crisp Malting giving growers guidance on what varieties are in demand by the brewing and distilling end users.

Malting barley prices for the 2017 harvest started at £130/t and moved to £170/t during the wet summer. Prices for the 2018 harvest are now starting about £140-150/t reflecting less carryover of stock after the difficult malting barley harvest in 2017.

Although an AHDB Early Bird Survey suggests 3% higher nationwide spring barley plantings at 773,000ha in 2018, Mr King expects the spring barley area in Norfolk to be largely steady in 2018 compared with 2017.

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