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Every Thing Else Board
Lives lost
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<blockquote data-quote="RDFF" data-source="post: 1802407" data-attributes="member: 39018"><p>I'd bet that's what BFE did by the look of the rye. I generally planted "green", and then terminated by various means afterward, when I was doing row crops. Have seeded everything down now, and am running cattle on the majority of it year round (feeding hay by unrolling in winter after the stockpiled feed is gone). BTW, any rye here is only about 2" tall right now, but it HAS greened up considerably just this past day now. It's coming, but <u>very</u> slowly! I don't remember rye ever being this slow... neighbor puts it in after canning crops (late September), and even his is just getting good and green.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RDFF, post: 1802407, member: 39018"] I'd bet that's what BFE did by the look of the rye. I generally planted "green", and then terminated by various means afterward, when I was doing row crops. Have seeded everything down now, and am running cattle on the majority of it year round (feeding hay by unrolling in winter after the stockpiled feed is gone). BTW, any rye here is only about 2" tall right now, but it HAS greened up considerably just this past day now. It's coming, but [U]very[/U] slowly! I don't remember rye ever being this slow... neighbor puts it in after canning crops (late September), and even his is just getting good and green. [/QUOTE]
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