Sounds perfect!My plots could sure use a mowing, clover is thickening up and the cereal rye is 3-4ft tall. I hate to mow now due to the possibility of fawns being born. But dang, it’s like a jungle in spots
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My plots could sure use a mowing, clover is thickening up and the cereal rye is 3-4ft tall. I hate to mow now due to the possibility of fawns being born. But dang, it’s like a jungle in spots
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A rite of spring; March 25th, out on the tractor no-tilling 100 lb oats per acre into my existing clover plots. Last year I sprayed herbicide for grass on the clover plots in the early spring, so this year I'm skipping that step because I killed most of the early grasses last year, but I do have a bit of cattails and other late season grasses, so this year I will move my seasonal spray to late summer for these late season grasses, sometime after the oats mature. I'll probably let the oats ripen and the turkeys and deer will eat the seed heads. A little known fact is that deer love eating oat heads.
Last fall I drilled oats into this clover, which winterkilled, the remnants of those oats can be seen in the picture. The fall oats and clover combo was a huge hit with the deer, but I'm still asking myself why I didn't drill fall rye instead, because I wouldn't need to be out here drilling oats right now, because the rye would still be growing. As I recall, it had something to do with price and availability...
I also threw a bag of Regal Graze clover into the small seed box, set at 4 lb per acre, just as insurance to keep my clover plots in good population.
Notes: broadcasting these oats would take 200 lb per acre, when drilling, every seed grows, when broadcasting, half the seeds grow.
Also, as you can see by the soil on the closing wheels, it was a bit wet, to wet to plant corn, but early oats will do just fine in this moisture.
A very astute observation, its late enough to be doing this, I have already drilled oats as early as the first week of March in zone 6b, but they will still get plenty of sunlight to grow. I predict that within three weeks they will be neck to neck with the clover. The deer will be in whitetail heaven for several weeks as the new oats provides a grazing combo.The clover looks like it has a head start. The oats will still catch up and get some sun before the clover swallows them up?
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Nice pictures, blue skies and green fields are a welcome sight to ease our spring fever. This weekend our weather has been raw, with a strong cold snap blowing through and nighttime temperatures in the twenties.Mine is a little ahead of yours:
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That last pic shows wheat, oats, clover (crimson, durana, arrowleaf), vetch, and chicory.
The snow depth map shows my place has 4-12" of snow yet. I'm still holding out hope to let my cool season seeds fly this coming weekend. If I spread seed the day the last of the snow melted, it'd be right on target for me.I chuckle at folks already doing maintenance…. It’s snowed the last couple days and the high tomorrow is 15. Still, in between squalls, if the sun is out, the Toms are already fanning.
Thinking about your cold climate, and not to get into a political argument, but from a farmers perspective;The snow depth map shows my place has 4-12" of snow yet. I'm still holding out hope to let my cool season seeds fly this coming weekend. If I spread seed the day the last of the snow melted, it'd be right on target for me.
Way to go! I see a lot of hunters who want to do their food plot work in July. The time to fix a plot is right as it starts growing, not after it's done. I'd love to see pictures of your plots.Gonna have to get the sprayer on the cart this week and get some cleth on a couple of our plots. Need to spray gly on the turnip greens too. Thanks for the reminder MM!
Nice pictures, blue skies and green fields are a welcome sight to ease our spring fever. This weekend our weather has been raw, with a strong cold snap blowing through and nighttime temperatures in the twenties.
P.s. I missed the introduction to your black lab in the pics?
I’ll snap a few when I get out there. One plot needs the whole revamp, I’ll be spraying clethodim on all of it. It’s too valuable to let it go another year with the cool season grasses running wild. On the Massey, I’ll be only putting clethodim on a small portion that got hit by the cool season grasses really hard in late fall. And then the turnip greens of course, that will be going to buckwheat in another couple months hopefully.Way to go! I see a lot of hunters who want to do their food plot work in July. The time to fix a plot is right as it starts growing, not after it's done. I'd love to see pictures of your plots.
I'm not worried about it. We'll figure it out when we need to. We still waste a ton of the growing season (even up here) along with lots of money and inputs.Thinking about your cold climate, and not to get into a political argument, but from a farmers perspective;
The entire world depends on sunshine and warm weather to grow food. It seems to me like 2 degrees warmer average is much better for the survival of humanity than 2 degrees colder would be.
It's just impossible to grow anything without sunshine.
It's a good idea to alternate herbicides, I'd suggest alternating with clethodim, switching it up regularly seems to make the herbicide more potent. 24,dB is also a good one for things like thistles.I use Thunder, but not till I see some grass starting. It sets Yellow Sedge back. We are still getting snow showers, so no green up yet!