Sue Braykane
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah, so it fascinates me.
We've got the inside track.
We've got to have conversations with you.
Of course, we've been following along with the business.
Our listeners are the same way, getting some of the latest exposure.
As you see this moving forward, I know you've got a goal in mind, Ryan.
Do you think there'll be a drone on every farm?
Yeah.
Oh, it is. And you look back at the imagery, you can try patterns across a lot of fields. We had a guy call and he's looking at the manure application. It was custom done, nothing wrong with custom done, but you can break on your own equipment too. Not every sensor feeds back to a cab to know that you've got a blocked line or you've got something going on. So what do I do? There's an application.
Oh, it is. And you look back at the imagery, you can try patterns across a lot of fields. We had a guy call and he's looking at the manure application. It was custom done, nothing wrong with custom done, but you can break on your own equipment too. Not every sensor feeds back to a cab to know that you've got a blocked line or you've got something going on. So what do I do? There's an application.
Oh, it is. And you look back at the imagery, you can try patterns across a lot of fields. We had a guy call and he's looking at the manure application. It was custom done, nothing wrong with custom done, but you can break on your own equipment too. Not every sensor feeds back to a cab to know that you've got a blocked line or you've got something going on. So what do I do? There's an application.
If you're widening a spot, you could do something with a drone to maybe pick up and feed some of those spots, but you don't want to mass produce nitrogen across the acres. That's a lot of volume. but there's ways to treat areas as you go across or know the area that it affected from a perspective of the acres too.
If you're widening a spot, you could do something with a drone to maybe pick up and feed some of those spots, but you don't want to mass produce nitrogen across the acres. That's a lot of volume. but there's ways to treat areas as you go across or know the area that it affected from a perspective of the acres too.
If you're widening a spot, you could do something with a drone to maybe pick up and feed some of those spots, but you don't want to mass produce nitrogen across the acres. That's a lot of volume. but there's ways to treat areas as you go across or know the area that it affected from a perspective of the acres too.
I don't think you're wrong.
I think that's the right route that it's going to go.
But maybe it ends up being further down the road because the capacities have already continued to increase.
What's new on the technology side in the drone world?
So my background is completely agronomy. We farm in southern Iowa, mix the cattle country and row crop and alfalfa for our own operation, but I played in the seed industry for several years and worked in and out of that. I got a chance to work with an equipment company. I love the new equipment, wondering what can you do with it, what can be next.
So my background is completely agronomy. We farm in southern Iowa, mix the cattle country and row crop and alfalfa for our own operation, but I played in the seed industry for several years and worked in and out of that. I got a chance to work with an equipment company. I love the new equipment, wondering what can you do with it, what can be next.