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<blockquote data-quote="Okie4570" data-source="post: 4268812" data-attributes="member: 15643"><p>It's not so much the rainfall or lack of on clover and alfalfa plots, it's lack of humidity and high winds. Alfalfa will still make it for the most part though even in an area of 30" per year, low humidity and high winds. Clover here doesn't stand a chance. I'm planting alfalfa this fall on one plot. Thousands of acres of dryland alfalfa around here along with some irrigated but not much.</p><p></p><p>Alfalfa and clover should have no problems in Okfuskee county, you're far enough east. Lots of humidity and not much wind.</p><p></p><p>In the pic below, the area in red will usually be a fourth or a third as tall as the rest because the wind constantly blows through the opening in the trees on the south end of the plot.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]480598[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Okie4570, post: 4268812, member: 15643"] It's not so much the rainfall or lack of on clover and alfalfa plots, it's lack of humidity and high winds. Alfalfa will still make it for the most part though even in an area of 30" per year, low humidity and high winds. Clover here doesn't stand a chance. I'm planting alfalfa this fall on one plot. Thousands of acres of dryland alfalfa around here along with some irrigated but not much. Alfalfa and clover should have no problems in Okfuskee county, you're far enough east. Lots of humidity and not much wind. In the pic below, the area in red will usually be a fourth or a third as tall as the rest because the wind constantly blows through the opening in the trees on the south end of the plot. [ATTACH=full]480598[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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