Roehampton Garden Society


Farming of the future

Agriculture and food growing is a huge growth area for robotics. With current difficulties in finding a skilled workforce to plant and pick, this may be the future.

M&S have just announced successful automated growing of parsnips – an industry first. The technology, includes two robots for bed forming, planting and weeding, two different types of drone to monitor and maintain crop health, and scientific testing on soil health and carbon impact. Green fertiliser, less diesel, less ploughing all combine to reduce the carbon emissions by an amazing 46 per cent. See more here

In another research project Cambridge university has trained a robot to pick iceberg lettuce – one of the most difficult crops to harvest! See more here

It’s still a challenge to train a robot to judge a ripe fruit or notice disease or damage as well as a human can, but the advances are fascinating. Take a look at the latest types of intelligent agricultural machinery.

Strawberry picking

13 types (!) of automated farm machinery working now

For anyone interested in a deep dive into how horticulture uses robots, this article from ‘Grower Experts’ explains how automation is used. Link here

with thanks to Helen Finch