![]() Check to make sure your row of grapes is perfectly parallel with the CP course - if not you can demolish it and place it again. Drag to the other end of the row, about 10m from the edge, and place the end pole, again halfway between the CP course lines. I like to start on a row in the middle of the field. Place your first grape pole about 10m in from the edge of the field, halfway between the CP course lines. ![]() Go into the build menu and select grapes. Now, turn on "all waypoints visible" in the tractor's CP settings so you can see the entire course. I recommend setting skip rows to 1 as they are so narrow. Select a working width of 3 meters - remember you are concerned with the spacing of the grape vines, NOT the implement. Basically you create the course and then plant your grapes to match it.Ĭhoose a rectangular field, get in a tractor with any implement connected, and go into CP course generation for the field. You are receiving this because you authored the thread.Message have figured out a workaround that will let you use CP with your grapes. Triage notifications on the go with GitHub Mobile for iOS Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub Headlands since those crops do not have space for headland work, they startĬan a course be recorded and then make it work as fieldwork mode with a Generated if you set the same row distance in the CP menu, but without ![]() You can mulch and fertilize on a single passage in that row, instead of If it helps, thefarmsimguy at youtube posted a video some days ago to editĪ XML file in order to allow to reduce the spacing between rows, so that To make CP detect the placeable rows will be a big task i believe. Placeable lines of the olives and grapes and make it use that path asįieldwork mode, be it for fertilizing, spraying and even harvesting, trying The only way i see it working is to manually record the paths through the Path through the entirety of the field just planning the tool width, not It doesnt work for olives and grapes for the simple reason that those are with that in mind, maybe a course can be generated if you set the same row distance in the CP menu, but without headlands since those crops do not have space for headland work, they start straight from the edge of the fields.Ĭan a course be recorded and then make it work as fieldwork mode with a mulcher or sprayer? If it helps, thefarmsimguy at youtube posted a video some days ago to edit a XML file in order to allow to reduce the spacing between rows, so that you can mulch and fertilize on a single passage in that row, instead of going 2 times on the same row. The only way i see it working is to manually record the paths through the placeable lines of the olives and grapes and make it use that path as fieldwork mode, be it for fertilizing, spraying and even harvesting, trying to make CP detect the placeable rows will be a big task i believe. ![]() helper AI or courseplay will plan a path through the entirety of the field just planning the tool width, not detecting where the crop rows are. Also grapes are less susceptible to freezing and frost than peaches and nature prunes them so that the top buds die which allow for the lower ones to get bigger until you get the right size grape for what you want to do with it.It doesnt work for olives and grapes for the simple reason that those are placeable items, not a regular crop. In dryer climates with little water the grapes will not taste sweet, but in colder climates the grapes will taste sweet, a climate that is dry and cold will produce the better tasting grapes and wine that have both a sweet taste and a bitter taste that is the ideal taste for grape juice and wine. All wine production and grape juice production the taste and quality is not the same as the type of grapes and the type climate depends on how sweat and bitter the production batch will be. If the game didn't have to appeal to a rating system you could use the crops in more than one production system like wheat barely and oats can all be used in distrilias to make Beer, and grapes would have a wine production. The preservation of grapes is to dry them as raisens, or juice them for grape juice which is sometimes called unfertminted wine.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |