He has since repeated the same exercise over the past three years adding to his data gathered.
Concerns over chemicals in waterways centres mainly on nitrogen, which is well-known for its ability to substantially increase grass growth. However, Casey's trial revealed he could produce similar yields on paddock 21 over the three-year trial period with nowhere near the same quantities of nitrogen used on paddock 22.
"We averaged 16,414kg of dry matter (DM) over the trial period on paddock 21, compared to 16,700kg in paddock 22. Subsequent animal dietary analyses showed the quality was significantly better, too, in paddock 21," Casey said.
"The difference was that over the three year trial period the traditional applications included a total of 513kg tonnes of solid N, while in paddock 21 we used just 47kg of liquid - that's a huge drop and significantly important when it comes to cleaner waterways.
"Using Rapid N as the base, we could add various trace elements to act as grass-growth promotants and these are chemical-free. The trace elements used were dictated by traditional soil and herbage tests that revealed any deficiencies."
Reducing nitrogen is becoming mandatory and restrictions loom.
He said many doubted just as much quality grass could be grown using only a 10th the amount of N used by traditional methods.
"It really comes down to belief systems I guess. The generally held belief is more N equates to more grass, but my trial clearly illustrates we can produce just as much with a 10th the N traditionally applied," Casey said.
"I've been shouting this from the tree tops for the past few years, but nobody appears to want to listen. I would love someone to take me to task and put my claims to the sword - I know it works and have the proof."