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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Autum crop bradcast just to surface
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<blockquote data-quote="1982vett" data-source="post: 1630193" data-attributes="member: 7795"><p>Ryegrass is an excellent choice for broadcasting in that manner. Somewhere, sometime some years ago, I saw a time laps video how it "cork screws" itself into the ground when it gets wet. However the grazing it provides is a little later than oats. I'm finding that isn't a big problem if I have good pastures going into the winter. I used to think I needed knee high oats by November. That was when I had bare pastures going into September and was supplementing them with hay till I could turn in on the oats I spent time and money to plant in prepared seedbeds. Best part about ryegrass is I don't have to plant it. It volunteers every year. Fertilizing for it early in the fall will help get a little earlier grazing. Doesn't hurt what's already in the pastures either.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="1982vett, post: 1630193, member: 7795"] Ryegrass is an excellent choice for broadcasting in that manner. Somewhere, sometime some years ago, I saw a time laps video how it “cork screws” itself into the ground when it gets wet. However the grazing it provides is a little later than oats. I’m finding that isn’t a big problem if I have good pastures going into the winter. I used to think I needed knee high oats by November. That was when I had bare pastures going into September and was supplementing them with hay till I could turn in on the oats I spent time and money to plant in prepared seedbeds. Best part about ryegrass is I don’t have to plant it. It volunteers every year. Fertilizing for it early in the fall will help get a little earlier grazing. Doesn’t hurt what’s already in the pastures either. [/QUOTE]
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Autum crop bradcast just to surface
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