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Johnson Grass
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<blockquote data-quote="Anonymous" data-source="post: 496"><p>I live in S.E. Kansas and find your comments about Johnson grass interesting. It is a prohibited weed here but I think it could have a place in grazing programs. I currently cell graze an orchard grass, clover, alfalfa, crab grass pasture. It has a fair number of johnson grass clumps in it. Due to my rotation, it never heads, it spreads by rizome only, is the first thing they eat, is the most drought tolerent, and seems to be the most productive plant in the pasture. It appears to be low in nitrogen requirement. Why isn't it used more in pasture programs in Texas and Oklahoma?</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p> <a href="mailto:jcoover@chanuteks.com">jcoover@chanuteks.com</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Anonymous, post: 496"] I live in S.E. Kansas and find your comments about Johnson grass interesting. It is a prohibited weed here but I think it could have a place in grazing programs. I currently cell graze an orchard grass, clover, alfalfa, crab grass pasture. It has a fair number of johnson grass clumps in it. Due to my rotation, it never heads, it spreads by rizome only, is the first thing they eat, is the most drought tolerent, and seems to be the most productive plant in the pasture. It appears to be low in nitrogen requirement. Why isn't it used more in pasture programs in Texas and Oklahoma? [email=jcoover@chanuteks.com]jcoover@chanuteks.com[/email] [/QUOTE]
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