logo
Bednar working demo day promotes two-pass simplicity

Bednar working demo day promotes two-pass simplicity

Agriland24-05-2025

The arrival of Bednar in the Irish market was firmly cemented in place with a demonstration day held by Farmworks Ltd of Ballyboughal, Co. Dublin.
Farmworks was appointed as an agent for the company last year and this joint event was the biggest working demonstration of the range yet here in Ireland.
Bednar hails from the Czech Republic and focuses only on tillage equipment so as to not divert its attention from developing implements that will best serve farmers in this sector.
Working machines
On the demonstration day, there were nine machines working the ground, which was provided courtesy of Donnolly Ltd, growers of fresh vegetables for the retail trade in Ireland.
Adrian Winnett, Bednar manager for UK and Ireland, explained that the machines chosen had good potential for sales here as they represented compact units that were suited for smaller fields and farms rather than the vastness of eastern European steppes.
A good selection of primary and secondary cultivation tools were to be seen in at the demonstration day in Co. Dublin
This philosophy was epitomised by a 3m version of the company's Terraland chisel plough, which was set to work at 50cm – 15cm up from its maximum.
The leg is equipped with a chisel point plus broad wings which run slightly higher than the point itself, while the Active Mix plates on the front of the leg further turn the soil.
In action, the Terraland chisel plough was creating a course seed bed in one pass while incorporating stubble and weeds.
This produces a deep loosening at the depth of the chisel point, while the wings provide a churning above that level, which in this particular field uprooted all the weeds and stubble and incorporated them into the mixed soil.
Although this takes place out of sight, the whole effect is to leave a series of channels created by the points with the cultivated soil lying above them across the whole width of the machine.
This, Bednar claims, aids in drainage while cutting through any compaction.
Spiked rollers
Following on from the cultivating legs were a pair of packing rollers with overlapping curved spikes that further reduced the tilth and provided a course seed bed. These rollers are said to be self-cleaning and suitable for all conditions.
The Terraland TN 3000 HM7R appeared an effective tool that Bednar claims takes out tramlines and compaction in addition to its tillage effect, which left the stubble buried and all weeds uprooted.
The chisel point, the wings, and the Active Mix plate make up the three working parts of the leg on the Terraland, with a spiked roller behind
The 280hp Fendt 728 Vario was making light work of the task of cultivation, as it should, for the power requirement stands at around 200hp minimum for this 3m version, and forward speeds of 15-20kph were being happily achieved.
Winnett suggested that the Terraland could replace the plough in many situations, though he believes there will always be a need for complete soil inversion – a common sentiment in the industry and tillage farming generally.
Drilling the field
Bednar have a suggestion for following on from the Terraland and that is its Omega trailed drill, which in this case was a 4m unit attached to another Fendt 728, that again looked a well-matched duo
The Omega range is designed to cope with all pre-cultivated soil situations, from after the plough to shallow discing, but not direct drilling – that is the the job of its heavier sibling, the Directo.
The Omega trailed drill is designed to cope with most systems except direct drilling
Running after the Terraland, the Omega produced a fine seedbed from the coarse one left by the chisel plough. This was down to its double bank of discs, which are precisely arranged in an optimal 'X' configuration according to Bednar.
The Omega also has the facility to place fertiliser between the cultivating discs and the tyre packer should a split hopper be opted for. However, on the demonstration day, it was seed only, which is fed to the double disc coulters running at the rear and helped along by the pressurised hopper.
For direct drilling, Bednar has a machine designed for the job in the form of the Directo range
Bednar and Farmworks were suggesting that these two tools combined provided a complete cultivation and drilling operation requiring just two passes, thus reducing diesel use and the time required to establish a crop.
This method is also considered kinder to the ground than a power harrow/drill combination, which is primarily designed to create a seed bed by pummelling the soil, rather than through the heaving and stirring that is the effect produced by the Terraland chisel plough.
The Kator KN power harrow range is best suited to hard or dry soils, according to Bednar
The company does produce its own range of power harrows but gives the impression that it believes there are better and more efficient ways of seedbed preparation, including this two pass system, which requires less skilled labour and fuel.
Lighter equipment
For those seeking a lighter approach to primary or secondary cultivation, Bednar produce the Fenix range of harrows, which can work to 35cm but still demonstrate that a great deal of thought went into their design.
Being a relatively young company, the engineering takes a modern approach with no legacy models that need to be dragged into the present day through endless modification.
The Fenix harrows represent a new generation of implements that represent the latest in production technology.
The Fenix harrows are open machines with plenty of room between the tines to allow the crop to flow, yet they remain strong and light, the sort of design which has been thoroughly examined through stress analysis before being let loose in the fields.
They represent a new generation of tillage tools – tools that have been created in engineering programmes from the outset and work in the field without endless prototypes having to be bodged together until it does the job.
This not only helps in creating a solid implement that will last, but also keeps the development costs down, savings which, Bednar tells us are being passed on to the customer.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nursing home chain at the centre of RTÉ Investigates programme issues apology
Nursing home chain at the centre of RTÉ Investigates programme issues apology

The Journal

time37 minutes ago

  • The Journal

Nursing home chain at the centre of RTÉ Investigates programme issues apology

LAST UPDATE | 20 mins ago THE NURSING HOME chain at the centre of a programme by RTÉ Investigates has issued an 'unequivocal' apology to residents and their families. Emeis Ireland, formerly known as Orpea, operates 27 nursing homes across the country after entering the Irish market in 2022. The RTÉ programme that is to air tonight highlights poor treatment and practice within two of the homes under the chain's brand. Two RTÉ researchers worked undercover in two different homes; one in The Residence Portlaoise, and one in Beneavin Manor in Glasnevin. Taoiseach Micheál Martin today said that he is 'very, very concerned' about the investigation's findings. 'I think it's shocking what is likely to be revealed following the report,' he told reporters in Dublin. He said that it was 'unacceptable' that the operator had allowed the failures to occur within its nursing homes. A statement from the company said that it has begun a comprehensive review across both nursing homes as a result of the failures identified within the programme. 'The findings are deeply distressing, wholly unjustifiable, and entirely unacceptable. We express our deep concern, as the wellbeing, dignity, and safety of residents in our care will always remain our foremost priority.' It said that it has issued 'clear guidance' to all its employees, which it said would be reinforced through targeted training and enhanced supervision in 'individualised resident handling, continence management, and safeguarding'. 'We will not tolerate any individual or systemic neglect, nor any practices that compromise resident safety, rights, or dignity.' Advertisement Within the programme, which The Journal has previewed, staff at the nursing homes are seen to have left residents dressed in inappropriate incontinence wear, left unchanged for hours at a time, and being discovered in wet clothing after they had wet themselves. It also shows a man with dementia, recorded with secret cameras installed by RTÉ, being 'roughly handled' by staff. The company also said that it is reviewing the oversight and management of medical supplies and clinical practices across all of its nursing homes. 'Assistance programmes for residents, families, and staff are being established in response to the serious issues identified. 'Staff, residents, families, and members of the public have access to a confidential whistleblower portal through which concerns can be raised without fear of reprisal. 'All concerns are promptly investigated, reported to the appropriate regulatory authorities, and followed up with individualised safeguarding plans and strengthened oversight to mitigate the risk of recurrence,' Emeis said in a statement. Staff members at Emeis-operated nursing homes made protected disclosures to the Health Information and Equality Authority (HIQA), but it took 17 weeks for follow-up inspections to be carried out, the programme reports. Charity ALONE said that it is shocked and dismayed at the revelations featured within the programme. Its CEO Seán Moynihan said, 'But shock and anger aren't enough – the Leas Cross Nursing Home scandal was 20 years ago. This needs to finally be the wake-up call that sparks real change in how we support and care for older people.' 'Inside Ireland's Nursing Homes' airs tonight at 9.35 pm on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player. With reporting by Eimer McAuley Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

URC chief realistic about Croke Park crowd numbers in event Leinster make final
URC chief realistic about Croke Park crowd numbers in event Leinster make final

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

URC chief realistic about Croke Park crowd numbers in event Leinster make final

BKT URC boss Martin Anayi is 'being realistic' about a likely attendance at Croke Park in two weekend's time should Leinster overcome some concerning form and qualify for the league final against one of two South African opponents. The choice of GAA headquarters was made last summer when the URC's teams were asked to pencil in potential dates for the calendar ahead. It appeared at that time as if the Aviva Stadium would not be available for a theoretical decider due to soccer commitments. So it is that Leinster and one of the Sharks or Bulls would compete for the league title on the northside of the Irish capital in the event that Leo Cullen's side makes it that far. And that would create a challenge. Leinster did draw a capacity 80,000-plus crowd to Croke Park for a regular season meeting with Munster back in early October, and for a Champions Cup semi-final against Northampton Saints 13 months ago. More recent crowd figures at the Aviva Stadium give cause for concern while Munster's elimination at the last eight stage last weekend in Durban deprives competition organisers of a potential all-Irish clash that would have generated enormous interest. Timing is another factor with ticket offices and marketing departments having just seven days to drum up sales, and early indications are that it would be a bridge too far to have Croke Park anywhere near half full. 'We've got a really good relationship with the GAA and the leadership there, working very closely with Leinster,' said Anayi. 'There's a lot of tickets to sell in a very short period of time, that one week. 'We're being realistic about what can happen, but it's exciting. We'd love to have that as a spectacle, which is one of the brilliant things that is happening in Ireland, that we're seeing rugby being played in GAA stadiums very successfully.' The first three URC finals have all been played in South Africa with a figure of 31,000 in year one jumping into the fifties for the next two. Over 33,000 tickets have already been sold for the Bulls-Sharks semi-final at Loftus Versfeld. Should Glasgow win this weekend, another final would go down south. Ultimately, there is no sure way of ensuring high crowds given the vagaries across five competing nations and the compacted rugby schedule, but Anayi did confirm that there will be a week off between the final two rounds next year. Now in his tenth year as CEO, the Englishman started off an hour-long media briefing by highlighting the journey taken by a league which has clearly improved from its days as the Celtic League, Magners League and PRO12 or 14. Attendances, he claimed, are up 14% with an average of just under 12,000 per game, and broadcast figures are improving every year since the URC's inception with over 150 million viewers logged since 2021. New TV deals through to 2029 were announced for the various territories earlier this year. Total earnings have supposedly shot up by 33% in the competition's new guise, with another 15-16% bump predicted by 2027. The South African union (SARU) will become a full shareholder in the URC as of this summer, but then change is stitched into the DNA of this tournament and there may be more around the corner given the turbulence in Wales. The Welsh union's contract with the URC commits them to four participating clubs. That is at risk with suggestions that one of the regions may go out of existence, although Anayi said the league would work with the WRU which is, again, one of its shareholders. Whatever about losing a team or two, it doesn't look like the URC will be admitting any more for now regardless of speculation in the last year about the possibility of teams like Georgia's Black Lion or London Irish coming on board. Anayi referenced player welfare, logistics and the league's current competitiveness as potential barriers and remarked that 'the bar is very high' for further expansion. Not that any such concerns stopped the establishment of a World Club Cup. Due to start in 2028, it will replace the knockout stages of the Champions Cup that year, and again in 2032. The URC, as a stakeholder in the EPCR organisation that runs the European competitions, is fully on board. 'We've supported the EPCR and it is very much something that our partners in England and France feel strongly about it. It seems it could be quite intriguing … to see the likes of the Brumbies and Crusaders compete against the best teams in Europe, and South Africa. 'We have a couple of touch points in that, where Crusaders came up and played against Munster in Pairc Ui Chaoimh when Munster had won our league and Crusaders had won Super Rugby Pacific. 'That got a really good attendance, a sellout. That was one little nugget to say, 'okay, there is an interest in that'. That was one of the areas that we focused on.'

Two crew members of MV Matthew were ‘completely expendable' court hears
Two crew members of MV Matthew were ‘completely expendable' court hears

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Two crew members of MV Matthew were ‘completely expendable' court hears

Det Superintendent Keith Halley told the three-judge court that Englishman Jamie Harbron was on the 'lowest rung' in the criminal enterprise to transport the massive drugs haul across the Atlantic, into Europe. Harbron was hired as a deck hand on board the Castlemore, an Irish ship which was supposed to meet the MV Matthew and take the drugs to the UK, the detective said. Under cross-examination, Det Halley told Harbron's defence counsel, Michael O'Higgins SC, that Harbron's jobs appeared to include 'greasing things up' or tidying the ship. He did not appear to be a 'competent or good deck hand,' Supt Halley said. He couldn't operate the radio, find the life vests or secure a tow rope thrown from a coastguard boat in an attempt to rescue the vessel. Having been on rough seas from Friday afternoon until Sunday evening, Harbron was 'very sick' and told gardai he believed he was going to die. Harbron was finally winched to safety by a coastguard helicopter and was 'very, very grateful' to his rescuers, the Superintendent said. When the Dubai-based organisers of the criminal enterprise realised the Castlemore had run aground, they initially told the ship's captain, Vitaliy Lapa, not to call the coastguard. They then removed the Castlemore from the virtual chat room used to communicate with the vessels and told the MV Matthew they would find another boat to make the rendezvous. Supt Halley agreed that this indicated Harbron and Lapa were 'completely expendable'. Harbron appeared to have become involved in the plot at the last minute and had told gardai that he was promised €10,000 would be wiped off a €20,000 drug debt. Lapa, the detective said, speaks no English and the two men communicated using Google Translate. The Dubai-based leadership had an 'erroneous belief' that the messages they had sent to the Castlemore would automatically delete after one hour, Supt Halley said. However, gardai retrieved the messages, which were used as part of the evidence in the case. ADVERTISEMENT Learn more Eight men have pleaded guilty to offences arising from the seizure of €157 million worth of drugs on board the MV Matthew. Members of the Irish Army Rangers wing of the Defence Forces boarded the ship on September 26, 2022 in a daring mission in rough seas as the MV Matthew manoeuvred to try to evade capture. The ship had departed from Curacao, off the Venezuelan coast and sailed across the Atlantic before arriving in Irish territorial waters. Ukrainians Mykhailo Gavryk (32) and Vitaliy Vlasoi (33); Iranians Soheil Jelveh (52) and Saeid Hassani (40); Filipino Harold Estoesta (31) and Dutch national Cumali Ozgen (50) pleaded guilty that between September 24 and 26 2023, both dates inclusive, at locations outside the State, on board the vessel 'MV Matthew' they possessed cocaine for sale or supply, in contravention of the Misuse of Drugs Regulations. Ukrainian national Vitaliy Lapa (62), with an address at Rudenka, Repina Str in Berdyansk, and Jamie Harbron (31) of South Avenue, Billingham in the UK pleaded guilty that on dates between September 21 and 25, 2023 they attempted to possess cocaine for sale or supply, in contravention of the Misuse of Drugs Act. Lawyers for all eight today asked the court to be as lenient as possible in sentencing. For mitigation, they rely on their guilty pleas and the fact that their time in prison will be spent in a foreign country away from their families. None of those before the court were the leaders of the criminal organisation involved in transporting the drugs but were hired to perform specific roles on the two ships, lawyers said. The only defendant with a record of offending is Jamie Harbron, whose convictions include cannabis and cocaine possession in the UK. Lawyers for the others submitted that their clients were of good character before this offence, but they 'succumbed' to temptation, hoping to resolve various financial difficulties. Brendan Grehan SC, for Kumali Ozgen, said his client's job on board the MV Matthew was to 'mind the cargo'. He was, counsel said, the 'eyes and ears' of those directing the operation from Dubai and had no seafaring experience. Ozgen admitted to gardai that he loaded crates of drugs onto the ship and used paint thinners to try to burn the drugs when the Irish Navy began its pursuit. He also said he was to be paid €50,000 to €100,000 if successful, but has received nothing. Mr Grehan said Ozgen took the job in a 'misguided attempt' to provide for his family, in particular his son, who suffers from poor health. Hugh Hartnett SC, for Gavryk, said his client was of excellent character before this offence. Michael Hourigan SC, for Estoesta, said his client had provided gardai with valuable information, including that when the drugs were loaded onto the MV Matthew, ordinary crew members were plied with alcohol to distract them. Mark Lynam SC for Hassani, said this was the first time his client was involved in 'anything of this kind'. He had been a sailor of good character all his life but 'succumbed to temptation', believing the money from this job would allow him to spend more time with his wife and family. Colman Cody SC, for Lapa, said his client was a hard-working, law-abiding citizen and a loving husband and father. Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Lapa found himself in a 'vulnerable financial position'. Despite having retired as a fishing captain, he was compelled to go abroad to provide for his family. 'He was vulnerable to certain pressures, and that ought to be taken into account,' counsel said. Paul O'Higgins SC, for Vlasoi, said his client was the first officer on the boat but had led a blameless life before. He had limited knowledge of the operation, counsel said. Keivon Sotoodeh BL, for Jelveh, said his client was the captain of the MV Matthew but was acting on orders from Dubai. The court previously heard that Jelveh became frustrated with the instructions he was receiving and called the coastguard for an emergency medical evacuation. A coastguard helicopter lifted Jelveh from the MV Matthew before the ship was engaged by Irish Naval vessel the LE William Butler Yeats. Ms Justice Melanie Greally, sitting with Judge Sarah Berkeley and Judge Grainne Malone, will deliver the sentences on July 4.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store