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Switch grass?

loneranger

Well-Known Member
Can U frost seed switch grass? How much soil is required for it to get going? Can ya scratch it in? Or do you need cultivated soil? One last thing. where do you buy frosty Berseem clover? thanks.....
 
Can U frost seed switch grass? How much soil is required for it to get going? Can ya scratch it in? Or do you need cultivated soil? One last thing. where do you buy frosty Berseem clover? thanks.....

Yes, frost seeding switchgrass is the preferred method. No soil prep is required, although I find it grows better if you do. The best stands I have are worked up ground, frost seeded, and then cultipacked when not frozen. Area should be fall prepped. Burn or mow, spray, etc. See Dbltree thread.

Welters Seed sells Frost Berseem
 
Frost seeding switch is by far my preferred method of seeding. Try to have it done by March 1st but we've done it as late as mid-March and has success. Just hope there isn't a warm/early spring if you do that. As said before - best to have the area killed of any sod grasses such as brome or fescue the fall before. Oust XP works great for smoking those cool season grasses in the September before.

Never heard of frost berseem clover - I'll have to look into that!
 
Switchgrass and other NWSGs have been the biggest habitat addition we've made on our farm. Generally in 2 years you have a wildlife paradise with this stuff! Here's an example I was showing some people the other day comparing brome to switch... pretty big difference, especially in winter with some snow

26172744_10102264020102743_6695356247017919988_o.jpg

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26198120_10102264020182583_1369966687536319234_o.jpg
 
OK where do ya buy switch grass? I intend to plant it in my logged out area. Mature trees ground to chips. a lot of bare ground tho too.
 
Switchgrass and other NWSGs have been the biggest habitat addition we've made on our farm. Generally in 2 years you have a wildlife paradise with this stuff! Here's an example I was showing some people the other day comparing brome to switch... pretty big difference, especially in winter with some snow

26172744_10102264020102743_6695356247017919988_o.jpg

26196447_10102264920827683_4338470620687190349_n.jpg

26198120_10102264020182583_1369966687536319234_o.jpg
Awesome looking grass. Can I ask what brand/mix that was planted?
 
Switchgrass and other NWSGs have been the biggest habitat addition we've made on our farm. Generally in 2 years you have a wildlife paradise with this stuff! Here's an example I was showing some people the other day comparing brome to switch... pretty big difference, especially in winter with some snow

26172744_10102264020102743_6695356247017919988_o.jpg

26196447_10102264920827683_4338470620687190349_n.jpg

26198120_10102264020182583_1369966687536319234_o.jpg
Very nice!!!! And- if u can- post it in dbltree section too!!! :).
*which - btw- have some “good news” on that front soon. ;)
 
A quick question, not preferred but you could frost seed or drill it and then kill the other stuff in APril long before the switch starts growing correct?
 
A quick question, not preferred but you could frost seed or drill it and then kill the other stuff in APril long before the switch starts growing correct?

You can but each time we've tried to kill brome in April it's been minimal success. It appears it's all "dead" for the first two months, maybe even the first year it is set back, but a couple years down the road it's coming back strong and begins to choke out the switchgrass. That's when late spring burns and some light spring doses of OustXP or SpyderXP help to knock the brome back again. This is if you're trying to convert a brome/fescue/cool season grass field into switchgrass that is. If it was old bean or corn stubble then spraying a pre-emerge like atrazine in the spring will work great for you!
 
Awesome looking grass. Can I ask what brand/mix that was planted?

This particular plot was Nebraska 28, I believe we got it from our local PF chapter. The rest of the switch we've ever planted on the farm was Cave-in-rock. Get's taller than the NE28. Both still provide amazing cover though.

This is some of the CIR switch we've established on the farm. Amazing cover
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The above picture didn't show the height of the CIR well since I was standing on top of a terrace when I took it. So I went back a few weeks later and snapped this picture, it's all eye level, 5-6ft tall.
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With cover like that who needs timber? Well actually it is great to have both. Extremely underrated and not used as much as it should be....tall switch can hold a lot of wildlife and makes for great travel corridors.
 
With cover like that who needs timber? Well actually it is great to have both. Extremely underrated and not used as much as it should be....tall switch can hold a lot of wildlife and makes for great travel corridors.

Put this stuff next to a good wood lot, awesome edge/transition zones. Mature buck heaven! Trees/timber make it a little easier to bowhunt. haha
 
The above picture of the head high CIR is a 3 year old stand - it produces some awesome cover really quickly. We burned it for the first time last spring... it's HOT as you can imagine
 
Put this stuff next to a good wood lot, awesome edge/transition zones. Mature buck heaven! Trees/timber make it a little easier to bowhunt. haha

I think a mix of both is perfect, for hunting, but they also seem to really like cedars in switch or near the switch.
 
Switch grass turned the corner on my Farm , and Hinge cutting bedding areas.. Like Night and Day just took a few years to see the results once I started. I personally would kill everything prior or your going to have problems.. I learned the hard way..
 
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