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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 199712" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>There fescues and then there are <em>fescues</em>. The old KY31 high endophyte stuff can be a problem unless you dilute it with legumes or other grasses or your cows don;t develop a tolerance for it. The enophyte free stuff lacks persistence. The friendly(novel) endophyte stuff has better persistence then the endophyte free stuff and doesn;t have the toxicity of the KY31.</p><p>Fescue isn;t all that invasive, spread mostly by windborn, cattleborn, or critterborn seed.</p><p>The WSGs are hard to establish but they do well in the summer and provide good grazing, but they take a lot more managment (or less mismanagment) then fescue.</p><p></p><p>dun</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 199712, member: 34"] There fescues and then there are [i]fescues[/i]. The old KY31 high endophyte stuff can be a problem unless you dilute it with legumes or other grasses or your cows don;t develop a tolerance for it. The enophyte free stuff lacks persistence. The friendly(novel) endophyte stuff has better persistence then the endophyte free stuff and doesn;t have the toxicity of the KY31. Fescue isn;t all that invasive, spread mostly by windborn, cattleborn, or critterborn seed. The WSGs are hard to establish but they do well in the summer and provide good grazing, but they take a lot more managment (or less mismanagment) then fescue. dun [/QUOTE]
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