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Bermuda grass
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<blockquote data-quote="Brute 23" data-source="post: 1420797" data-attributes="member: 6291"><p>There are some volunteer bermudas that come up but they do not make runners. Yes, coastal will spread from feeding hay. Its not actually as dry as you think in there. We have a couple places where my grandfather planted coastal hay fields and now it covers the majority of the place. Before we planted the remaining in tifton you could see little circles of coastal. My dad was real big on rolling out bales. The land all had a gradual slope and we would drop them at the top and roll them down the hill. These soils were more on the sandy side. None of it was black ground.</p><p></p><p>Im not sure if you can do it as easy with Jiggs or Tifton. They are a harder to establish in general.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brute 23, post: 1420797, member: 6291"] There are some volunteer bermudas that come up but they do not make runners. Yes, coastal will spread from feeding hay. Its not actually as dry as you think in there. We have a couple places where my grandfather planted coastal hay fields and now it covers the majority of the place. Before we planted the remaining in tifton you could see little circles of coastal. My dad was real big on rolling out bales. The land all had a gradual slope and we would drop them at the top and roll them down the hill. These soils were more on the sandy side. None of it was black ground. Im not sure if you can do it as easy with Jiggs or Tifton. They are a harder to establish in general. [/QUOTE]
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