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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
fescue/native/wild/white clover
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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 1332227" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>The fields we cut for hay, fescue, wild dutch clover and OG we will graze in the fall, or if it's a mild winter and not a problem with water lines freezing we will graze it as stockpiled. Clover is a pain to get to cure without the fescue getting too dry, but we've never had any issue with the hay causing a problem when fed.</p><p>We mow the stuff at 3-4 inches so that it doesn;t burn from the heat. This year I raked it once when the stuff on top was really dry, let it sit a couple of hours and baled it. The clover seemed to cure better and the fescue wasn;t too dry to bale.</p><p>We soil test every other year and fertilize to the specs in the test.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 1332227, member: 34"] The fields we cut for hay, fescue, wild dutch clover and OG we will graze in the fall, or if it's a mild winter and not a problem with water lines freezing we will graze it as stockpiled. Clover is a pain to get to cure without the fescue getting too dry, but we've never had any issue with the hay causing a problem when fed. We mow the stuff at 3-4 inches so that it doesn;t burn from the heat. This year I raked it once when the stuff on top was really dry, let it sit a couple of hours and baled it. The clover seemed to cure better and the fescue wasn;t too dry to bale. We soil test every other year and fertilize to the specs in the test. [/QUOTE]
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