Brian Dougherty
1.3K posts

Brian Dougherty
@SoilStudent
Consultant at Understanding Ag LLC. Life begins and ends in the soil. How we treat it in between is what matters.




It was a 1/2-mile dirt track that opened in the 1950s and hosted stock car racing, modified events, sprint cars, and local racing for decades. It became especially active in the 60s, 70s, and early 80s when short-track oval racing was booming in the Carolinas. Many NASCAR personalities spent time there early in their careers because Charlotte as a region was and still is the center of the stock-car racing industry. The track started declining by the late 80s and early 90s. Racing slowed, the property changed hands, and the site eventually sat unused. There were multiple redevelopment plans proposed including turning the site into a test track or an entertainment complex but nothing stuck. The concrete grandstand you see in the lower photo is still a landmark because it is one of the few surviving elements above ground. Today the Metrolina Fairgrounds area is partially overgrown and broken up into smaller parcels but aerial photos still clearly show the outline of the oval. It is one of Charlotte’s most recognizable abandoned racing relics. © Reddit #drthehistories





























Let’s talk management strategies Start with your corn N program Excess fall N in the soil fuels IDC next spring ✅ Split N applications ✅ Target a NUE of 0.6–0.8 ✅ Use Agronomy 365’s SET test to measure mineralization potential Right N rate = less spring nitrate = less IDC


