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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
seed heads - dun
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<blockquote data-quote="regolith" data-source="post: 1137230" data-attributes="member: 9267"><p>Takes a lot longer than that here. Most of our ryegrass starts flowering late October or sometime in November. I don't think the seed falls till Jan/Feb.</p><p></p><p>I'm certainly curious on the answers to this thread, as I know hay fields don't drop significant amounts of seed and rotational grazing at optimal intervals doesn't allow it to happen... lax rotational grazing allows for some seeding but also reduces the overall quality of the pasture. </p><p>A lot of new grass came up with the autumn rains here so there must have been some seed dropped recently, other than where hay has been fed out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="regolith, post: 1137230, member: 9267"] Takes a lot longer than that here. Most of our ryegrass starts flowering late October or sometime in November. I don't think the seed falls till Jan/Feb. I'm certainly curious on the answers to this thread, as I know hay fields don't drop significant amounts of seed and rotational grazing at optimal intervals doesn't allow it to happen... lax rotational grazing allows for some seeding but also reduces the overall quality of the pasture. A lot of new grass came up with the autumn rains here so there must have been some seed dropped recently, other than where hay has been fed out. [/QUOTE]
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seed heads - dun
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