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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: blahblahblah]
#1724943
04/26/16 12:53 AM
04/26/16 12:53 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
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Posts: 23,750
Awbarn, AL
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I may have overlooked it, but what is the process of liming while using the throw and mow? Do you just top dress it? Yes, just top dress it. Someone who is just starting out though, needs to assess the condition/type of their soil and let that be a consideration as well. If you are dealing with a hard clay that has been tilled in the past and has a very compacted, crusted over surface.....then it would be better to go ahead and cut the lime in. In sandier conditions it wouldn't be as big of a concern. Once you get your soil gets turned around even in heavier clays though, your soil structure will change and allow better infiltration. That's really the basis for the decision. Is lots of water running off of your plot or is it soaking up in the ground?
Last edited by CNC; 04/26/16 12:54 AM.
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: ALFisher]
#1724945
04/26/16 12:58 AM
04/26/16 12:58 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
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Dances With Weeds
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Dances With Weeds
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Awbarn, AL
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One of my plots, which is about 2 acres, looks like 270wsm's above. The rye is taller, but the crimson clover looks just like his.
Last fall, I limed it and brought the ph up to 6.3 this year. Not quite neutral, but not bad either. I was actually thinking about doing some throw and mow this summer of peas or other good food. My only other option is just to lime and disc the lime in, and maybe plant some summer crop or soil building crop like buckwheat or sun hemp the old-fashioned way.
I'd really like to try the throw and mow method for the summer at least on this one plot. What do you think? Good idea? Bad idea? If a good idea, what to plant? and how?
Soil test also says I need 0-90-60 (lbs) for phosphorus and potassium per acre for iron clay peas. Loam and light clay soil.
Thanks. If I were just starting the throw and mow method, I'd wait until fall and do my first planting with a cereal grain, clover, brassica mix. I'd spend this summer getting ready for that planting by mowing down those mature cereal grains and getting a mulch layer started on the soil surface. I'd then work on getting your nutrients right during the summer and allowing the plot to grow another crop of biomass from the natural vegetation which will be used to cover over your fall seed with another mulch layer.
Last edited by CNC; 04/26/16 12:59 AM.
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: 270wsm]
#1724947
04/26/16 01:01 AM
04/26/16 01:01 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
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Dances With Weeds
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Dances With Weeds
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Awbarn, AL
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I pulled soil samples Sat and sent them off today. Plan on liming and bush hogging in May/June, but that's about it. Hopefully, I'll have a good "grass" kill on 2 plots I sprayed and won't have to spray them again or at least not until Aug/Sept. Have you considered throwing out some millet for a cover crop in those sprayed fields for the purpose of putting a quick canopy over the soil surface?
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: CNC]
#1725091
04/26/16 04:27 AM
04/26/16 04:27 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
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Dances With Weeds
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Dances With Weeds
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We ideally want to try and grow a diverse mix of plants with a nice balance between them. Here around the edge of my field, the cereal grains have received more grazing pressure and therefore were thinned out more than the interior of the field. This thinner canopy has allowed the understory to receive more light and flourish more than the thicker interior thats more shaded. The picture below shows a pretty nice balance of diversity. This concept dealing with canopy.overstoryunderstory..etc is an important one to understand. I probably should have gone ahead and mowed the rye one time right before it went to seed. That would have terminated some of the plants and thinned out the rye some. Its a lot thicker than I thought. On a side notepay attention to your cereal grain production in the spring, It can tell you a lot about your plots productivity as well as the browsing pressure its receiving. Many small plots wont even produce grain because the deer keep them eat down too much. Other plots wont produce grain because soil conditions are too poor. As you improve the soil conditions, you may likely see more grain production. This yellow flower I believe is cutleaf evening primrose. Start thinking outside of the box that weve put food plotting in. Listen to the deer more than the farmer to tell you what is good and what is bad. Crimson clover is pretty this time of year and therefore youll get a lot of folks who want to use that scene to represent a great deer plot.....and at one point in time it was. However, just like Joe pointed out.Do the deer think that picture of pure crimson is just as pretty? Hell no.They quit feeding on crimson clover a couple weeks earlier as it began to harden off and go to seed. You want to have diversity. Most of your weeds are the enemies of farmers...not goats.
Last edited by CNC; 04/26/16 04:31 AM.
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: CNC]
#1725292
04/26/16 09:53 AM
04/26/16 09:53 AM
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Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 656 SW Alabama
ALFisher
4 point
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4 point
Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 656
SW Alabama
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One of my plots, which is about 2 acres, looks like 270wsm's above. The rye is taller, but the crimson clover looks just like his.
Last fall, I limed it and brought the ph up to 6.3 this year. Not quite neutral, but not bad either. I was actually thinking about doing some throw and mow this summer of peas or other good food. My only other option is just to lime and disc the lime in, and maybe plant some summer crop or soil building crop like buckwheat or sun hemp the old-fashioned way.
I'd really like to try the throw and mow method for the summer at least on this one plot. What do you think? Good idea? Bad idea? If a good idea, what to plant? and how?
Soil test also says I need 0-90-60 (lbs) for phosphorus and potassium per acre for iron clay peas. Loam and light clay soil.
Thanks. If I were just starting the throw and mow method, I'd wait until fall and do my first planting with a cereal grain, clover, brassica mix. I'd spend this summer getting ready for that planting by mowing down those mature cereal grains and getting a mulch layer started on the soil surface. I'd then work on getting your nutrients right during the summer and allowing the plot to grow another crop of biomass from the natural vegetation which will be used to cover over your fall seed with another mulch layer. That's kind of what I did last year. I planted cereal grains (mostly rye), CC, and rape in this plot. I spread one ton of lime per acre before doing so. That brought the ph up to 6.3 from 5.8. Given that, is your advice the same? Also, when you say, "work on getting your nutrients right during the summer" what do you mean? More lime and disc it in then let natural vegetation grow? Thanks for your help.
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: ALFisher]
#1725820
04/27/16 02:50 AM
04/27/16 02:50 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750
Awbarn, AL
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Also, when you say, "work on getting your nutrients right during the summer" what do you mean? More lime and disc it in then let natural vegetation grow?
Thanks for your help. Holding capacity for nutrients is like a bucket. Depending on soil type and organic matter content some plots will have a big bucket.some plots will have a small bucket. Either way you still want to try and keep a balanced ratio of all nutrients within your bucket. Take K as an example. The optimum K level for my plot right now is around 210 lbs/ac. I tested my plot a couple falls ago after having added some 0-0-60 and I was running 220 lbs/ac which is great. Cut to the following spring when I did another soil test and my levels had dropped to around 180 lbs/ac. Youll often here people talk about adding 0-20-20 in the spring to fertilize their clover. That really misrepresents whats going on though. You dont really fertilize the plant.you fertilize the soil. That following spring I added another dusting of potash (0-0-60) not to fertilize the clover but rather to get my K levels back up into the optimum range. Your nutrients such as Ca (lime), P, and K will stay in the soil for long time periods if soil conditions are good. It is very possible that if you keep those levels in check during May, June then at most you will probably only need a small dusting at fall planting to bring levels back up or maybe even none at all. Again, change the way you think about fertilizing. Were not fertilizing the plant.were adding nutrients to the soil. The soil fertilizes the plant. Nitrogen is a little different beast. It has a very short life compared to the other nutrients. From what I can tell, I get about 5-6 weeks out of a nitrogen application. Adding nitrogen to a plot is like giving an engine more gas. All of those other nutrients are like the individual components of the engine. If you get them in proper balance with one another then when you give the engine gas.itll go! Adding nitrogen to your plot is like stepping on the go, go, grow gas pedal. It needs to be added to produce more yield. Let me stop right there for now..Questions?
Last edited by CNC; 04/27/16 02:51 AM.
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: CNC]
#1725918
04/27/16 04:43 AM
04/27/16 04:43 AM
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 15,132 Right Behind You
William
Old Mossy Horns
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Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 15,132
Right Behind You
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Going to the co-op today to pickup a Spring mix. Throw and mow tomorrow ahead of the rain. Not sure what I'm gonna plant.
Mix had: iron clay peas, soybeans (Hutchenson), WGF sorghum, sunflowers, and buckwheat.
Last edited by William; 04/27/16 09:39 AM.
"The misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing... compared to the misery of not being exploited at all."
Joan Robinson
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: ALFisher]
#1726167
04/27/16 10:46 AM
04/27/16 10:46 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
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Awbarn, AL
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I hear you, CNC, but do you just broadcast it or do you cut in your lime and fertilizer? Just broadcast it unless you are dealing with some really hard clay soil.
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: CNC]
#1726544
04/27/16 04:55 PM
04/27/16 04:55 PM
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 15,132 Right Behind You
William
Old Mossy Horns
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Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 15,132
Right Behind You
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Of course we didn't get the rain we were supposed to today......
"The misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing... compared to the misery of not being exploited at all."
Joan Robinson
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: William]
#1726749
04/28/16 03:40 AM
04/28/16 03:40 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
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Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
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Awbarn, AL
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Of course we didn't get the rain we were supposed to today...... Any pics of the field before/after planting?
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: CNC]
#1727049
04/28/16 08:39 AM
04/28/16 08:39 AM
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 15,132 Right Behind You
William
Old Mossy Horns
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Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 15,132
Right Behind You
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Of course we didn't get the rain we were supposed to today...... Any pics of the field before/after planting? Would have been nice wouldn't it?
"The misery of being exploited by capitalists is nothing... compared to the misery of not being exploited at all."
Joan Robinson
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: William]
#1727563
04/29/16 04:21 AM
04/29/16 04:21 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
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Awbarn, AL
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Would have been nice wouldn't it? Yeah....it makes it a lot easier to answer questions when folks have them. If you take enough pictures then its almost as good as someone being able to walk the plot themselves. Soil temps are looking much better now for many of our summer plot species. It's still low though for things like buckwheat or egyptian wheat. They call for 80 degree temps on those I believe. I think sorghum may be in that class too but I don't recall for sure without looking it up. You can see the difference that just a couple weeks has made and why its important to check soil temps when deciding when to plant in the spring. Soils temps have risen over 10 degree.
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: CNC]
#1727575
04/29/16 04:48 AM
04/29/16 04:48 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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Dances With Weeds
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Awbarn, AL
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Some good info on cereal rye.... Link
We dont rent pigs
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Re: Throw n Mow Q&A
[Re: CNC]
#1728763
05/01/16 04:26 AM
05/01/16 04:26 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 23,750 Awbarn, AL
CNC
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Dances With Weeds
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Dances With Weeds
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Awbarn, AL
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No-till tomato update.....Some of the plants are starting to reach the first set of scaffolds now and as they do I'm going ahead and pruning off the lower limbs. The plants are really growing fast. I'll have to get a second row of scaffolding going pretty soon.
Last edited by CNC; 05/01/16 04:27 AM.
We dont rent pigs
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