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brome
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<blockquote data-quote="Stocker Steve" data-source="post: 238516" data-attributes="member: 1715"><p>Yields for hay are not the same as yields for grazing. Rest periods needed and regrowth rate vary alot. Brome is OK in a hay mix but it is not one of your best grazing grasses.</p><p></p><p>With cheap N you can plant (sod forming) brome with a (bunch) grass, spray it for weeds, and throw on the fertilizer. A lower cost approach is to plant clover or alfalfa with meadow fescue or tall fescue or reed canary.</p><p></p><p>My latest magic mix is alfalfa and a little white clover with meadow fescue and festolium and a little brome...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stocker Steve, post: 238516, member: 1715"] Yields for hay are not the same as yields for grazing. Rest periods needed and regrowth rate vary alot. Brome is OK in a hay mix but it is not one of your best grazing grasses. With cheap N you can plant (sod forming) brome with a (bunch) grass, spray it for weeds, and throw on the fertilizer. A lower cost approach is to plant clover or alfalfa with meadow fescue or tall fescue or reed canary. My latest magic mix is alfalfa and a little white clover with meadow fescue and festolium and a little brome... [/QUOTE]
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