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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Experience with low-tannin Sericea lespedeza?
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<blockquote data-quote="Lucky_P" data-source="post: 1189105" data-attributes="member: 12607"><p>I'm a big fan of annual lespedezas- Korean & Kobe, and 'Marion' saved the day, back in the drought of '98. </p><p>Have toyed with trying some of the low-tannin sericea types on a couple of poor paddocks(reclaimed from a stand of 40 yr old planted pines, decimated by ice storm). </p><p>Anybody got any experience with AU-Lotan or any of the other low-tannin sericea types? - for grazing, not haying.</p><p></p><p>There are a few patches of old-timey sericea here and there on the farm, but I never even see the cows nibbling on tender young shoots. Still remember some sericea hay my dad & uncle used to put up, back in the 60s... bundles of woody stems and leaves that shattered off - if you didn't feed over a manger, the cows wouldn't get anything...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lucky_P, post: 1189105, member: 12607"] I'm a big fan of annual lespedezas- Korean & Kobe, and 'Marion' saved the day, back in the drought of '98. Have toyed with trying some of the low-tannin sericea types on a couple of poor paddocks(reclaimed from a stand of 40 yr old planted pines, decimated by ice storm). Anybody got any experience with AU-Lotan or any of the other low-tannin sericea types? - for grazing, not haying. There are a few patches of old-timey sericea here and there on the farm, but I never even see the cows nibbling on tender young shoots. Still remember some sericea hay my dad & uncle used to put up, back in the 60s... bundles of woody stems and leaves that shattered off - if you didn't feed over a manger, the cows wouldn't get anything... [/QUOTE]
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Experience with low-tannin Sericea lespedeza?
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