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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Broadcasting clover seed?
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<blockquote data-quote="Nowland Farms" data-source="post: 452126" data-attributes="member: 2797"><p>alabama, </p><p></p><p>I broadcast the clover seed this morning around 10am so it hadn't quite had time to germinate :lol: </p><p></p><p>I went ahead and drug the field with the chain harrow. It couldn't hurt since all it really cost me was an hour or so of time and a couple of gallons of fuel. </p><p></p><p>Even though it has been dry here this year, this is the 1st step toward my goal of not having to feed hay in the wintertime. As I have said before my cows eat the fescue hay until the middle of February when I pull them off to get the fescue ready for the spring hay season. I am trying to get something for the to eat from mid February until the costal greens up around mid March. I have about a 4 week window that I either feed hay or have something else growing they can eat. If we would have had rain this fall I would have drilled rye and clover.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nowland Farms, post: 452126, member: 2797"] alabama, I broadcast the clover seed this morning around 10am so it hadn't quite had time to germinate :lol: I went ahead and drug the field with the chain harrow. It couldn't hurt since all it really cost me was an hour or so of time and a couple of gallons of fuel. Even though it has been dry here this year, this is the 1st step toward my goal of not having to feed hay in the wintertime. As I have said before my cows eat the fescue hay until the middle of February when I pull them off to get the fescue ready for the spring hay season. I am trying to get something for the to eat from mid February until the costal greens up around mid March. I have about a 4 week window that I either feed hay or have something else growing they can eat. If we would have had rain this fall I would have drilled rye and clover. [/QUOTE]
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Broadcasting clover seed?
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