Brian662
5 year old buck +
AL seeds has a dealer list, may be one near you to save on shipping?Wow Brian that a great price. Curious on shipping costs but the seed has a great soil building quality and its reasonable. Ty for posting
AL seeds has a dealer list, may be one near you to save on shipping?Wow Brian that a great price. Curious on shipping costs but the seed has a great soil building quality and its reasonable. Ty for posting
This. Polycultures for biomassAlbert Lea seeds sells this summer tonnage mix that is as cheap as a bag of peas and will provide much more biomass, IMO. I have not used it but others on this forum have, looks to be a good blend for soil building and even if you broadcast heavy at 75 lbs/acre you're still around $75 for the acre with more diversity.
I'm going to try drilling some this summer I think even though I'm not really in soil building mode, I'd like some biomass to nurse along my fall brassicas in a few areas.
SummerMax CC6 Cover Crop Mix | Albert Lea Seed
Vigorous growing warm-season mix of summer annual grasses, broadleaves, and legumes blended for maximum summer growth, weed suppression, and soil building.alseed.com
For comparison. Green cover summer release at 47 pounds with shipping included is $124.00.
For this application, you might consider Green Cover’s Warm Season Soil Builder. 30# per acre with a drill/seeder or 45# per acre broadcast. $43 bucks shipped for a 30# bag. Cheap and super convenient. I am still thinking about using this for all my summer plots this spring. I will do Summer Release from then on.I have a 1 acre plot that I had in cereal rye last fall and because of poor soil and drought it did not do very good. I am wanting to plant a inexpensive soil builder this spring that I can crimp down after planting rye back into it this fall. Any ideas on an inexpensive crop that would work good for this? Would a spring planting of cereal rye be a good choice?
Thanks
All great ideas. I like Buckwheat to build OM. It will grow almost anywhere. So will rye. Can't go wrong with either.
If you like supporting bees and turkeys, Buckwheat is the way to go. When your field is in flower, you will almost literally be able to hear it before you see it with all the bees you'll attract.
CC grows like a weed here. I mean 4-5 feet tall!
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For this application, you might consider Green Cover’s Warm Season Soil Builder. 30# per acre with a drill/seeder or 45# per acre broadcast. $43 bucks shipped for a 30# bag. Cheap and super convenient. I am still thinking about using this for all my summer plots this spring. I will do Summer Release from then on.
I planted this around the 4th of July last year (too late) but really liked it even in a drought year.
Here is what is in it: Non-GMO Soybeans, Black Beans Forage Soybeans, Mung Beans, Sunn Hemp, Sorghum Sudan, Pearl Millet, African Cabbage, Mustard, Sunflower, Buckwheat, Okra, Flax, Rapeseed
Drought wiped out my summer plots as well, so that is something to consider when planting warm season blends to build the soil. I've never had a failure with the oat/pea mixture when planted in early spring though. The lower temps and better rainfall seems to make the early spring plantings more of a sure thing.Warning, cringe worthy pics! With drought conditions last year, growth was poor. It was my second year planting a summer cover. I have sandy soil so I’m in desperate need of organic matter. This the best growth I got as it was a depression in a previous pasture. Surgham grew tall and i could see all the plants grew. You can see the sand on the right…and the dead grass from no rain also.
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The bic below was a new plot we cut in the previous winter. Thats about two months of growth.
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I didn’t fertilize as I was waiting for rain that didn’t come. We received only 3 inches of rain in June (3 weeks after planting) and less than an half inch in July.
Here is my take. I consider I started with the bar at 0, and trying to get to 100. This will be my third year with full planting seasons. I planted a summer cover the first year, then a fall crop. Fall crop was hit and miss, but that was a dry year as well. I figured I may have raised the bar a little, but was learning along the way. Picked up an old grain drill which is nice to have. Planted last spring with high hopes but no rain. Planted in the fall again with much better results but also still in drought conditions. Deer are still digging in my plots for turnips. I think if I went from 0 to 10 the first year, last year I went from 10 to 25. with a normal rain year and some fertilizer, I have once again high hopes for 2024.
There are a lot of great mixes out there. I’d go with more diversity which is why I did the Diversimax. Go with a reputable company and get it the cheapest you can. Shipping is the killer. I’m within driving distance of Albert Lea seed. If you planted two different quality mixes side by side, you would probably end up with the same results. Rain, fertilize, ground prep, planting technique are probably bigger factors.
Not great pics at all, but it’s the reality.
My $0.02 This will be inexpensive easy to plant and do just what you are looking for.I have a 1 acre plot that I had in cereal rye last fall and because of poor soil and drought it did not do very good. I am wanting to plant a inexpensive soil builder this spring that I can crimp down after planting rye back into it this fall. Any ideas on an inexpensive crop that would work good for this? Would a spring planting of cereal rye be a good choice?
Thanks
You’re right about that!For southern folk no better summer plot than deer vetch (aeschynomene), Alyce clover, and Milo for summer. Can’t beat it.
I add sunn hemp too for biomass but not sure deer eat it much. They hammer the other stuff though.You’re right about that!
For southern folk no better summer plot than deer vetch (aeschynomene), Alyce clover, and Milo for summer. Can’t beat it.
I see them use sunn hemp when it’s small but not once it gets head high or more.I add sunn hemp too for biomass but not sure deer eat it much. They hammer the other stuff though.
Yep. I agree, buddy! They love the sunhemp in our blends. I also love it as it’s a higher c:n legume which is a nice benefit- if the deer will let it get that high.I see them use sunn hemp when it’s small but not once it gets head high or more.