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Orchard grass?
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<blockquote data-quote="greybeard" data-source="post: 1258251" data-attributes="member: 18945"><p>Birds can and do deposit all kinds of seeds ingested at another location--and spread any number of grasses and weeds--good and bad--when they poop the seeds out--in your (and my) pastures. </p><p>There IS, as stated, a certain amt of odd seeds in any sack of seed, but generally, you see the results of that spread over a large random area in a spotty fashion the 1st year, not grouped up in a wad. You may not even notice the first growing season and the random plants go to seed. Subsequent years, the seedhead growth from those 1st random plants makes it look like 'someone or something' planted a little patch or two in the middle of your desirable and intentionally planted grasses. </p><p></p><p>Let one goatweed plant mature in a field of Bahia or coastal, and the next year, you will have 100 goatweed in the same spot.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="greybeard, post: 1258251, member: 18945"] Birds can and do deposit all kinds of seeds ingested at another location--and spread any number of grasses and weeds--good and bad--when they poop the seeds out--in your (and my) pastures. There IS, as stated, a certain amt of odd seeds in any sack of seed, but generally, you see the results of that spread over a large random area in a spotty fashion the 1st year, not grouped up in a wad. You may not even notice the first growing season and the random plants go to seed. Subsequent years, the seedhead growth from those 1st random plants makes it look like 'someone or something' planted a little patch or two in the middle of your desirable and intentionally planted grasses. Let one goatweed plant mature in a field of Bahia or coastal, and the next year, you will have 100 goatweed in the same spot. [/QUOTE]
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