date:May 24, 2017
w drones might be able to benefit farmers, but few have reached a level of 'reliance' on the technology to the point where it is completely replacing traditional methods of monitoring crop health.
Mr Scrimshaw says drones themselves do very little, other than capture imagery and data, and it is the software systems that process this captured data that actually make the difference. The technology can help plan crop irrigation and rotation strategies, with real data, instead of historical data. A