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Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Finally get to drill my Reed Canarygrass this weekend
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<blockquote data-quote="Steve Wilson" data-source="post: 653649" data-attributes="member: 8362"><p>Finally!!! All it's been doing for the past several weeks is raining every couple days. I picked up the county's Great Plains no till drill last friday on the way to the farm. Of course, that made it rain both days of the weekend. It was dry enough to drill for the first time in over a month. We've had sunshine all week and temps up in the 70's. No rain forecast until sunday afternoon. Whooohoooo! :banana: </p><p></p><p>This is the burned off portion of the pasture we call the Outback. It's up a good 4 inches now, would have been higher but the cow herd got through the fence and had been grazing it, Fence is repaired now. </p><p></p><p>I'm planning to use the front box on the drill and plant 10 pounds R.C, 7 pounds Cow Pro Forage Timothy and 4 to 5 pounds of red clover per acre. By using that box, the seed will be placed directly inside the opener discs, instead of the small seed box in the rear which dribbles the seed out on the ground in front of the press wheels. Adding the timothy instead of oats was the recommendation of the seed distributor....Missouri Southern Seed. He said it will increase the yield and the canarygrass will choke it out by the time it establishes a sod in three years. He also advised not to apply too much nitrogen at first, no more than is needed to get the grass growing. Not 50 units or more, which would kick the timothy and clover so much that they would out compete the canarygrass. Sounds good to me. I'll hit it with 30-20-20 and give more nitrogen later, based on how the canarygrass is doing. Next week, I will spray the pasture with RoundUp to kill the existing vegitation.</p><p></p><p>I've been trying to get this canarygrass planted since last summer. Wish me luck.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Steve Wilson, post: 653649, member: 8362"] Finally!!! All it's been doing for the past several weeks is raining every couple days. I picked up the county's Great Plains no till drill last friday on the way to the farm. Of course, that made it rain both days of the weekend. It was dry enough to drill for the first time in over a month. We've had sunshine all week and temps up in the 70's. No rain forecast until sunday afternoon. Whooohoooo! :banana: This is the burned off portion of the pasture we call the Outback. It's up a good 4 inches now, would have been higher but the cow herd got through the fence and had been grazing it, Fence is repaired now. I'm planning to use the front box on the drill and plant 10 pounds R.C, 7 pounds Cow Pro Forage Timothy and 4 to 5 pounds of red clover per acre. By using that box, the seed will be placed directly inside the opener discs, instead of the small seed box in the rear which dribbles the seed out on the ground in front of the press wheels. Adding the timothy instead of oats was the recommendation of the seed distributor....Missouri Southern Seed. He said it will increase the yield and the canarygrass will choke it out by the time it establishes a sod in three years. He also advised not to apply too much nitrogen at first, no more than is needed to get the grass growing. Not 50 units or more, which would kick the timothy and clover so much that they would out compete the canarygrass. Sounds good to me. I'll hit it with 30-20-20 and give more nitrogen later, based on how the canarygrass is doing. Next week, I will spray the pasture with RoundUp to kill the existing vegitation. I've been trying to get this canarygrass planted since last summer. Wish me luck. [/QUOTE]
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Finally get to drill my Reed Canarygrass this weekend
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