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Drought Damage
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<blockquote data-quote="novatech" data-source="post: 932040" data-attributes="member: 5494"><p>My Tiffton 85 has come back but looks like the first year it was planted, shrinking back to the mother plants. Rain here is still in short supply this year, although it is better than last year. I doubt there will be enough hay made to justify the fertilizer.</p><p>One area had a lot of wild mustard. I shred and burned it before the Tiffton got going. The Tiffton now has no competition and is spreading back a lot better. Makes me think that doing a control burn on the entire hay meadow might have been in order.</p><p>My WW B Dahl is doing much better but so are the weeds in the same field. Got them with herbicide ( Cimarron Plus and a little 2-4-D).</p><p>In my small coastal meadow the coastal is pretty good in the deep sugar sand but it was not fertilized as there was no fertilizer available before the only good rain we had a while back.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="novatech, post: 932040, member: 5494"] My Tiffton 85 has come back but looks like the first year it was planted, shrinking back to the mother plants. Rain here is still in short supply this year, although it is better than last year. I doubt there will be enough hay made to justify the fertilizer. One area had a lot of wild mustard. I shred and burned it before the Tiffton got going. The Tiffton now has no competition and is spreading back a lot better. Makes me think that doing a control burn on the entire hay meadow might have been in order. My WW B Dahl is doing much better but so are the weeds in the same field. Got them with herbicide ( Cimarron Plus and a little 2-4-D). In my small coastal meadow the coastal is pretty good in the deep sugar sand but it was not fertilized as there was no fertilizer available before the only good rain we had a while back. [/QUOTE]
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