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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Managing Fescue in the 21st century
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<blockquote data-quote="pdfangus" data-source="post: 1306017" data-attributes="member: 6543"><p>Well theirs was a half hour presentation.</p><p></p><p>sampled fields on fourteen farms over three counties in the valley over several seasons.</p><p></p><p>some fields tested low.</p><p>some fields tested high.</p><p>some fields tested extremely high.</p><p>even the low testing fields were at or near the established toxic level.</p><p>Virginia seems to have some of the highest levels tested so far.</p><p>endophyte concentrations are not just in the seed head but this is how it is spread.</p><p>fertilizer for fall stock piling drives endophyte up as well. stronger plant - stronger endophyte.</p><p>same is true of spring fertilizer.</p><p></p><p>I will see if they can send me something like a link to their results....their presentation will be on video before too long</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pdfangus, post: 1306017, member: 6543"] Well theirs was a half hour presentation. sampled fields on fourteen farms over three counties in the valley over several seasons. some fields tested low. some fields tested high. some fields tested extremely high. even the low testing fields were at or near the established toxic level. Virginia seems to have some of the highest levels tested so far. endophyte concentrations are not just in the seed head but this is how it is spread. fertilizer for fall stock piling drives endophyte up as well. stronger plant - stronger endophyte. same is true of spring fertilizer. I will see if they can send me something like a link to their results....their presentation will be on video before too long [/QUOTE]
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Managing Fescue in the 21st century
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