George
Well-Known Member
For all rivers, give me a 16 parachute Adams.
I caught a lot of fish in Colorado on 16 parachute Adams.
G
For all rivers, give me a 16 parachute Adams.




 
 Time for another update.  As I’ve posted in the past, we got creamed by an infestation of Lambsquarter last year.  It was so bad I killed off 3 acres of brassicas because a virtual carpet of lambsquarter was growing and was soon going to shade out the the brassicas.  Consequently, we planted 9 acres of RR beans and corn to try to knock it down while still growing some winter food.  Because the infestation was likely to further spread, I knew I’d need a more effective way of spraying (my Atv mounted boomless sprayer simply wasn’t applying uniform coverage).  I was fortunate to find a 3pt 80 gallon 20’ boomed sprayer (I continue to be astonished at how disrupted the supply chain has been).  The difference in uniform coverage is significant.



 This one looks like he might have an extra point growing on his left base.Yes, we're getting a lot of the same. It all hearkens back to when I started the thread "another dry year?" and we were all comiserating about the lack of moisture for spring planting season. God probably thought, I will show them guys some real moisture.The curse of too much rain continues. We’ve averaged 2-3” of rain per week for a month. Plots are waterlogged and hampering growth in some areas. I overseeded 3 acres of corn/beans with brassicas yesterday. Tried to time the planting in advance of a steady rain. The stead rain turned into 11/2” deluge…with another 1/2” forecast. I figure a bunch of the seed will wash away, but enough should survive to make the efforts worth while. I intentionally reduced my corn seeding rate and upped my beans in these plots (seed was all broadcast). The idea is to creat lots of food within the cover of corn. We’ll see how it works out. I’m hoping 9 acres of corn will provide the cover/food to suck in and hold more of the local deer. Crossing my fingers….
 many weeds.  To combat the weeds, I tripled the amount of clover I put down (ag supply bin seed is cheap).  My idea was to have the clover be so thick as to shade out the weeds.  As the attached pictures how’s, the results were great as this is the cleanest clover plot I’ve ever grown (I have not used any herbicide).  I’m going to attempt a test by planting 1/2 of my home plot today in oats/heavy clover.  I’ll then plant the other half with rye/clover Labor Day weekend.  It will be interesting to compare next summer.