Williams Creek Farm of SW Iowa

Found the mix we seeded. Lots of diversity. Seeing a few come through…
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Zoomed in…
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Sad day today. Lost a good friend and companion the last 5 years. Frodo, you will be missed.
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Yesterday, I toured our farm after we've had a lot of rain the past few weeks. I'm excited to see how my experiment with the organic corn is looking. But I'm pretty bummed about our summer food plots. Here's some pics.

As mentioned in another thread--I flushed the first quail on our farm right next to the QuailSafe CRP. Here's where it was dusting itself:
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Failed Milo plot that is a part of the CRP program:
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Organic (non-GMO) corn is looking nice. At first I was concerned because there was no ears. But in talking with a good farmer friend, he said the ears won't show up until it starts tasseling. I have lived in corn country my entire life--how did I not know that?!? :-)
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This is a first year clover plot. I posted in another clover thread about my debacle... LOTS of weeds (pigweed, I think?). Earlier there was a lot of volunteer soybeans coming up with the clover and oats, so I haven't touched it. Was planning to mow, but am concerned it would smother the clover. Roller crimp? Right now I plan to do nothing and see what it looks like next spring.
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We got 7" of rain a few weeks ago, and it flipped our bridge over. I knew I should have had two cables instead of one. Should be salvable, though. :-(
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I had 3 plots where I drilled a summer mix that seems like it completely failed. Only grass growing up. I'm glad we can recover for our fall plantings here soon. :-)
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I can't tell for sure, but that may be waterhemp and not pigweed in your clover plot. Either way, I'd mow it right away before it chokes out your clover. The residue might smother some of the clover, but the clover might fill back in once it gets sunlight. I mowed some 6' tall rye that left a thick layer of thatch and the clover underneath worked its way through the junk.
 
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