A local seed dealer told another friend..."I never sell red clover cause deer don't like it"...oh really? Guess someone forgot to tell the deer!
I would believe that, my deer wont touch the red clover. They will only feed on the white clover.
A local seed dealer told another friend..."I never sell red clover cause deer don't like it"...oh really? Guess someone forgot to tell the deer!
Has anyone tried drilling cereal grains into existing clover? I would like to try it this fall and will have access to a truax drill just wondering how well it would work
I have tried this once and it seemed to work well for me. We harvested our last crop of clover in the first week of Sept., cutting it very short. I then no-tilled in soybeans. It rained the next day and 2 weeks after the soybeans were 6"tall and growing at the same rate as the clover... It turned out to be a very attractive spot until the first frost! The next spring, the clover came up with no ill effect from the fall planting. If I were to try this again, I would maybe try planting a mix such as Dbltree does. (oats, peas, forage radishes) I would leave out the rye and clover seeing as you already have clover established.Has anyone tried drilling cereal grains into existing clover? I would like to try it this fall and will have access to a truax drill just wondering how well it would work
The other strips are planted to:I mix the following:
Winter rye 50-80#'s per acre (56#'s = a bushel)
Spring oats 80-120#'s per acre (32#'s = a bushel)
Austrian Winter Peas 20-80#'s per acre (4010 or 6040 field peas will work fine for 1/2 the price)
Red Clover 8-12#'s per acre or white clover at 6#'s per acre
Groundhog Forage Radish 5#'s per acre
Plant seeds roughly 1-2" deep, and then cultipack to cover, broadcast clover seed and re-cultipack
Plant fall grains no earlier then the last week of August through mid September, earlier is better when adding peas and clover
and the third element is this:Dwarf Essex Rape Seed 1#
Purple Top Turnips 1#
Appin forage turnip 1#
Barkant Forage Turnip 1#
Barnapoli Rape Seed 1/2#
Pasja Hybrid Brassica 1/2#
GroundHog Forage Radish 5#
or and economical and very productive mix might be
Purple Top Turnips 3#
Dwarf Essex Rape 2#
GroundHog Forage radish 5#
Plant in mid to late July in most midwest states, or 60-90 days before your first killing frost.
Till ground, cultipack or firm soil, broadcast 5#'s per acre of brassica seed and re-cultipack.
Do NOT mix other crops (especially cereal grains) with brassicas!
Use 60-90#'s of actual nitrogen (150-200#'s of urea per acre) and 200-400#'s of 6-24-24
Divide any size plot or field and plant 80% to the brassica and rye rotations and only 10-20% in white clover and those combination's will attract, hold and feed whitetails year around and...lower your fertilizer and herbicide inputs to boot.... :way:
6-8#'s of Alice white clover (or your favorite white/ladino clover)
400#'s of 6-24-24 (soil test to avoid using more or less then required)
400#'s of pel lime
Sow in late August with the rye combo
I have a couple plots that still have the rye standing. Going to be planted into soybeans. Should I spray the rye or just till it under?
I didn't do the clover last year on the plots and what a mess. That is the only way to do it.
Paul,
I disk my plots, then drill in my rye, oats and peas with a grain drill.
Can I just broadcast the clover onto the soil and not cultipack the clover again?
Thanks alot!
Paul,
This year I will be using this tool that I found on craigslist to get soil ready before I use my grain drill for my peas, rye and oats.
http://www.towncountryltd.com/Freedom/seedbedfinisher.htm
2 questions:
1. How much earlier before I drill would you tear up the ground? (2 weeks?)
2. After I drill do you think I can just broadcast the clover and be done or would you do something different?
Thanks alot!