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Preppers' Corner
Question for you cattlemen and pasture grass
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<blockquote data-quote="Roy14" data-source="post: 3988173" data-attributes="member: 41855"><p>The above info is excellent. </p><p></p><p> If it were me, where I’m always short on free time, I’d turn cattle into it every 2-3 weeks and graze it to nothing, and while they’re pulled off I’d get a fertilizer spreader and add in crabgrass and clover seed, and let the cattle walk it in for you. Both are excellent grazing and will help choke the Johnson grass out, and what does grow will just add pounds on the hoof. Arrowleaf clover in particular will choke almost anything out given enough time, and it’s a nitrogen fixer also. </p><p></p><p>I’m a big fan of native grasses but they only succeed when grazed hard for shorts amount of time, with plenty of rest time in between. High intensity rotational grazing with long durations allowed for growth is your best bet for it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Roy14, post: 3988173, member: 41855"] The above info is excellent. If it were me, where I’m always short on free time, I’d turn cattle into it every 2-3 weeks and graze it to nothing, and while they’re pulled off I’d get a fertilizer spreader and add in crabgrass and clover seed, and let the cattle walk it in for you. Both are excellent grazing and will help choke the Johnson grass out, and what does grow will just add pounds on the hoof. Arrowleaf clover in particular will choke almost anything out given enough time, and it’s a nitrogen fixer also. I’m a big fan of native grasses but they only succeed when grazed hard for shorts amount of time, with plenty of rest time in between. High intensity rotational grazing with long durations allowed for growth is your best bet for it. [/QUOTE]
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