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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Is it to late to stockpile?
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<blockquote data-quote="Chris H" data-source="post: 441042" data-attributes="member: 1974"><p>I worked a few years at a greenhouse & garden store. Our recommendations were to NOT put N on grass in the fall past early September in southern Ohio. The reasoning was it kept the grass in an actively growing state instead of hardening off for the winter, like you said, storing reserves.</p><p>So I was surprised to see this article <a href="http://fairfield.osu.edu/ag/beef/beefAgst29.html" target="_blank">http://fairfield.osu.edu/ag/beef/beefAgst29.html</a> where Jeff McCutcheon(Ohio ST U. Extension) says </p><p></p><p>We chose to apply 50 lbs N the first week of Sept when we got 2 inches of rain. That's the last rain we got but if we get some next week we will apply 40 the the remaining acres that didn't get it. In a normal year, fescue will continue to grow into November here. We feel safe applying N up to about 4 weeks before it would normally go dormant.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Chris H, post: 441042, member: 1974"] I worked a few years at a greenhouse & garden store. Our recommendations were to NOT put N on grass in the fall past early September in southern Ohio. The reasoning was it kept the grass in an actively growing state instead of hardening off for the winter, like you said, storing reserves. So I was surprised to see this article [url]http://fairfield.osu.edu/ag/beef/beefAgst29.html[/url] where Jeff McCutcheon(Ohio ST U. Extension) says We chose to apply 50 lbs N the first week of Sept when we got 2 inches of rain. That's the last rain we got but if we get some next week we will apply 40 the the remaining acres that didn't get it. In a normal year, fescue will continue to grow into November here. We feel safe applying N up to about 4 weeks before it would normally go dormant. [/QUOTE]
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Is it to late to stockpile?
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