Stocker Steve
Well-known member
Terminating quack grass sod is way different than terminating cover crops.
1) You have higher OMWhy all the chemical N? Doesn’t pencil out here.
We have had good luck seeding a winter mix into living coastal sod in the fall. Usually plant something like rye,oats, peas, vetch and turnips. We no till it in about 4-6 weeks before the coastal is froze out.I don’t believe any reasonable level of success will be had no tilling into live sod. Glyphosate is an indispensable step in the no till so seeding process. It has been proven that glyphosate used in a forage rejuvenation situation does no long term damage to soil health. Glyphosate as used by many row crop farmers where it is applied several times per season every year is a different topic I think.
I always forget that there are places that can grow things year around and take advantage of dormant seasonal crops.We have had good luck seeding a winter mix into living coastal sod in the fall. Usually plant something like rye,oats, peas, vetch and turnips. We no till it in about 4-6 weeks before the coastal is froze out.
We also had a little bit of SS and cow pea left in the drill and ran it through the coastal in the spring. The SS didn't do to well competing with the coastal but the ace cow peas did pretty good. May plant some straight cow peas into some weaker coastal spots this coming spring.
From my experience those three a lot of times happen together.As with a lot of things, location is key.
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Certainly different climate to what you post about.I always forget that there are places that can grow things year around and take advantage of dormant seasonal crops.
There are folks using animals to overgraze the heck out of ground, then no til. Then graze again just before emergence. With some success.I don’t believe any reasonable level of success will be had no tilling into live sod. Glyphosate is an indispensable step in the no till so seeding process. It has been proven that glyphosate used in a forage rejuvenation situation does no long term damage to soil health. Glyphosate as used by many row crop farmers where it is applied several times per season every year is a different topic I think.
I was considering doing the samething.Might could scalp w a disc mower if animals don't graze it down enough.
It’s the competition with the existing plants that is my biggest concern. The height of the old crop is managed easily enough. I suppose it might depend on what you are planting. No- tilling alfalfa into old live sod is a waste of time and money. For me the only reason to plant is to rejuvenate hay land that is no longer producing enough of the desired species. Often times quack grass has become a problem. So seeding without a burn down will not work.There are folks using animals to overgraze the heck out of ground, then no til. Then graze again just before emergence. With some success.
That's how I did my ryegrass this last fall. Seems to have worked I think.
It is a whole other approach though. And an expensive approach to get down pat im sure.
We've not used chemicals on farm in quite a few years now. I'd like to keep jt that way.
Might could scalp w a disc mower if animals don't graze it down enough.
Thinking out loud here.
For what it's worth. We spread the manure from my wife's hay recyclers...$15 a bale at least I get something out of that S*** 🙂I have been talking with organic gardeners who do things on scale about alternative fertilize options.
They've talked fermenting organic materials, compost teas, some other stuff too. There are other options out there. Just a matter of trying something new and scaling them up. Folks are having some success in doing this.
Found a very knowledgeable young man that just moved here from AZ. Going to get him to help me treat a 25 acre hay lease we have. See how it goes.
I think we need to start looking at biological fixes/corrections though. Animals need to be put back on hay/crop ground for their impact. Feed hay back onto the hayfields. Organic matter is everything I do believe.
Absolutely. Must depend on your desired outcome and what you've got to begin with.It’s the competition with the existing plants that is my biggest concern. The height of the old crop is managed easily enough. I suppose it might depend on what you are planting. No- tilling alfalfa into old live sod is a waste of time and money. For me the only reason to plant is to rejuvenate hay land that is no longer producing enough of the desired species. Often times quack grass has become a problem. So seeding without a burn down will not work.
I'd love to find a source of manure. Chicken, cow, whatever.For what it's worth. We spread the manure from my wife's hay recyclers...$15 a bale at least I get something out of that S*** 🙂
I've used both dry chicken and wet hog manure and both worked just fine. But the stench from the hog manure was intimidating for about three/four days afterward. It would probably be best to do it before a rain.I'd love to find a source of manure. Chicken, cow, whatever.
Anyone in the east TN area with a lead on some. I'd be appreciated. Everyone I've spoken to has plans for what they've got.
It's going to cost no matter what I suppose. May opt for none again.What are prices for chicken litter in your area. Costing roughly $38 a ton here. To do 12 acres @ 2 ton an acre just cost of litter is $912.00 not including any trucking or spreading.
Other source wants 1500.00 for 24 ton. Plus, I would have to haul nobody delivers or spreads around here anymore. So, looks like nothing this year.It's going to cost no matter what I suppose. May opt for none again.