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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
planting Johnson grass early
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<blockquote data-quote="Texasmark" data-source="post: 1617866" data-attributes="member: 27848"><p>Since you didn't get an answer as yet, Looks like a good supply of N for one thing. Best I can remember plants of such origin, use a 3-1-2 ratio of the primary elements, as I read, like a 15-5-10 mix which is popular at the feed/fert. store here. The other thing I find about balancing out the mix is that I use a conical 500# 3 pt. applicator and it doesn't jam up on me like happens when high percentages, or pure N are in the hopper. My only concern in going overboard is that Prussic Acid is said to decay as the plant decays in the haying process. Nitrates absorbed during excessive fertilization with limited moisture to provide plant growth, don't......as I read. Now, how the economy of scale balances out with investment vs returns, you'd have to put a pencil to it for your particular operation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Texasmark, post: 1617866, member: 27848"] Since you didn't get an answer as yet, Looks like a good supply of N for one thing. Best I can remember plants of such origin, use a 3-1-2 ratio of the primary elements, as I read, like a 15-5-10 mix which is popular at the feed/fert. store here. The other thing I find about balancing out the mix is that I use a conical 500# 3 pt. applicator and it doesn't jam up on me like happens when high percentages, or pure N are in the hopper. My only concern in going overboard is that Prussic Acid is said to decay as the plant decays in the haying process. Nitrates absorbed during excessive fertilization with limited moisture to provide plant growth, don't......as I read. Now, how the economy of scale balances out with investment vs returns, you'd have to put a pencil to it for your particular operation. [/QUOTE]
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