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<blockquote data-quote="StrojanHerefords" data-source="post: 1816934" data-attributes="member: 42988"><p>I am not the biggest fan of applying nitrogen because it is ephemeral. It is the only chemical fertilizer that can evaporate from the soil. Money is much better spent on improvements that last. </p><p> I went to the Neil Kinsey seminar at AgPhd a few years go and it really expanded my thought process on soil fertility. Roots need certain levels of fertility to perform optimally and fields can vary drastically in terms of what is needed. </p><p>My recommendation would be to be to grid sample your pasture, maybe on sample for every cow that you run on the place. And then start a build program on the pasture that would bring the soil to its proper fertility level. The beauty of grazing is that cows can return the fertility back to the soil.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="StrojanHerefords, post: 1816934, member: 42988"] I am not the biggest fan of applying nitrogen because it is ephemeral. It is the only chemical fertilizer that can evaporate from the soil. Money is much better spent on improvements that last. I went to the Neil Kinsey seminar at AgPhd a few years go and it really expanded my thought process on soil fertility. Roots need certain levels of fertility to perform optimally and fields can vary drastically in terms of what is needed. My recommendation would be to be to grid sample your pasture, maybe on sample for every cow that you run on the place. And then start a build program on the pasture that would bring the soil to its proper fertility level. The beauty of grazing is that cows can return the fertility back to the soil. [/QUOTE]
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