How do you guys control weeds in your hayfield without the use of herbicides or are herbicides the only practical way?
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Herbicides are only practical way. Hit them with Rezlin and Roundup in late winter/ early spring. For Bermuda haymeadows. Hit meadows w Urea an Potash in early spring too. Aint NO cheap way to raise good hay!!!
What kind of hay?
And double down on praying for rain. Fuck this drought.
I would be as skeptical about taking advice on shooting from the extension office as I would ag advice in the shooting forum.
“I'm going to add some lime to see if that helps a little bit.“
Before you potentially waste your money on lime that you may or may not need, send in a soil sample and it will tell you everything you need to know. Spend $10 to potentially save you thousands
If you need lime don’t let anyone talk you into pelitized line, use ag lime.
Something to remember about lime, it works really slooooooow. Most people put lime out and in 6 months they say that was a waste of money and try something else then the lime starts working and they say see the second thing I did worked and not the lime.
I use Grazon mostly. However, about once every few years I will cut the final cutting a little early so there is some small amount of growth left to die in the winter. In the spring I wait until the winter weeds sprout and burn it. The VFD comes out and does it for a small donation. They are a bunch of pyros anyway so they jump at the opportunity. This serves the purpose of getting rid of the weeds and keeps the pasture clean. It also reduces the amount of Grazon I have to put on the ground. Tests of the first cut after this small burn show no impacts to the protein content, and I do it early enough that there isn't any real hay growth, just kills the weed seedlings and the seeds that are not buried. This is coastal.
But that soil sample is an absolutely necessary thing. You won't know if your crop can be successful unless you do this first. The other thing to remember is that hay production is also mining the soil's minerals and nutrients through the roots of your hay. The soil sample will tell you over time what you are
Definitely lacking in this area.pulling out (or is leaching) and at what rate.
Glad to hear someone's doing it. I wasn't really open to the idea of not using chemicals until I looked at the structure of some of those herbicides. I'll probably still need to use them just to get to a baseline.Mainly by keeping it cut on schedule... Took 9 tons off my lower pasture 2 weeks ago. Perfect hay with almost nothing (weeds) in it.
Gave it to a local dairy farmer in exchange for 30 tons of liquid manure. Next year, he'll be haying two of my fields. He is hurting because of hay prices. Farm family dating back to 1830's here. Least I can do is give him hay that I'd just cut to mulch anyway. Great family... great local history. The 'grandfather' who died recently was one of the guys who taught me to hunt.
Next year, if we get three cuttings off two fields, (9 tons was from one field... one cutting) I'd expect to pull about 40 ton to give to the family.
I've never used any chemical on it. But have been finish mowing it for 20 years. Expect that without returning the mulch to the ground the yields/weeds will change after a couple of years. We'll see. I'll also be running a disk over it in the fall. Mainly to aerate.
Sirhr
I'm hoping you're wrong but I'm not going to discount 30 years to my basically 0. I want to avoid herbicides if I can. The one field is probably going to need it no matter what.Well, I been Farming 30 years. I don’t know a single person who puts up ‘clean’ hay that does not use Herbicides. Thats -0- There’s a huge difference between nutricious hay and growed up grass. Soil samples are a great tool. But if your soil sample calls for say 4 ton Lime/acre, you are wasting money putting 3 tons/acre. We try to cut 2250lbs/acre dry matter hay per cutting. In S Ark Bermuda is king on hay. Ea cutting will suck 33-40lbs of Potash. Potash is crucial for Bermuda hay production. We put chicken litter at 3 ton/acre yearly, then use potash and urea accordingly. Hay is expensive!!!
No shit. What hay? It's so dry the weeds aren't even growingAnd double down on praying for rain. Fuck this drought.
That’s no joke. Ranchers are selling breeding stock at the salebarn right now. No pasture, no hay this winter, no water that the hogs haven’t turned into a wallow. Even the deer and pigs are skinny. It’s pretty bad right now.No shit. What hay? It's so dry the weeds aren't even growing
I didn't even know that was an option. I was getting close to buying the pelletized lime at TSC because it was close. I had a feeling 100lb per acre was too low.Find a supplier of lime that will supply the spreader. There’s a couple around me, I mainly use Nutrien. The price is usually about the same because they all get it from the same supplier, at least around here anyway.
A hundred pounds isn’t enough to move the needle on ph. If your soil sample calls for lime they will recommend putting out an amount per acre usually 1,2 or 3 tons per acre. That recommendation is to make your soil optimum for whatever you are growing. Don’t waste your money trying to get the optimum ph just get in the range for your crop, you won’t be able to afford it. Put out a ton and next year sample again and see how much it moved and go from there.
Yup… I can give you a great answer for my 40 acres of pasture in mountain vt. I can’t tell worth a damn what is happening across town, 10 miles away.Yeah you are right. No real farmers shoot. They are too busy getting brainwashedFarmers don't research other regions or grasses because that does nothing for our yield. Ask a hay question on a national forum get regional answers.
You are needed in the "masks work" and "EV's are the future" threads where real knowledge is on display.
This may or may not be true. The underlying fallacy of your statement is that if you make the soil what your particular crop likes all the weeds will go away. It isn’t true. Some weeds will cohabitate just fine and use up what you put out for your crops.I’m not saying you will never spray but if you manage your soil spraying will be very minimal and localized to problem areas.
Hay is going for $7-$10 a bale (small 40lb bales) right now because so many people are having issues with hay. The weather guy got us good on one of our cuts.That’s no joke. Ranchers are selling breeding stock at the salebarn right now. No pasture, no hay this winter, no water that the hogs haven’t turned into a wallow. Even the deer and pigs are skinny. It’s pretty bad right now.
Thats interesting, thanks. Ph means a lot in many areas.you can do it mostly but it takes time. First thing, send off a soil sample. Without that your driving in the dark. Then set your soil up for grass and not weeds. What I mean is get your ph right and feed the grass according to the soil sample. The first year you won’t see much improvement and you may need to spray depending on how bad the weeds are. Second year you’ll see improvement and the third year you should have the grass you want and hardly any weeds. If your soil wants to grow weeds you will continuously be spraying then they come back and then you will spray again, a bad cycle. If your soil wants to grow grass then the grass will handle the weeds for you.
This may or may not be true. The underlying fallacy of your statement is that if you make the soil what your particular crop likes all the weeds will go away. It isn’t true. Some weeds will cohabitate just fine and use up what you put out for your crops.
No shit. What hay? It's so dry the weeds aren't even growing
Aah, the fragrance of cowshit in the morning. Brings back such memories.Gave it to a local dairy farmer in exchange for 30 tons of liquid manure.
Sirhr
This is true. Now that your ph is correct your grass is thriving and the weeds are struggling you have them mostly whipped, it’s just a matter of time. Now the cohabitate weeds will need sprayed probably and since your grass is thriving it will choke out any new ones that try to come up. Weed management is the easiest part, undesirable grasses are harder. I am concentrating on ph because it’s the big gorilla in the room but there are other trace minerals that can come in to play.This may or may not be true. The underlying fallacy of your statement is that if you make the soil what your particular crop likes all the weeds will go away. It isn’t true. Some weeds will cohabitate just fine and use up what you put out for your crops.
We are really dry here, we had a 40% chance of rain today and I couldn’t make it rain even by cutting 50 acres of hay. I guess I should have told the kids to wash all the vehicles to.
Is alphalpha the clover or is it mixed with annual clover or another perennial clover also? Timothy is an annual grass also isn't it? I am not used to seeing them mixed out here its usually aphalpha clover all alone. Or some one has a weed problem they are fighting. Thistle is an annual so spraying or manually removing plants before they go to seed is going to reduce your seed bank over time. If you are irrigating make sure you don't have more seeds coming in with the water. As mentioned above there are probably people in your area who have dealt with the same problem. What you are growing isn't going to be a lot like Bermuda grass. Whats your environment like? I.E inches of rain per year.I'm new at this so names might be wrong. Clover, Timothy, alfalfa, fescue and rye. Mares tail weed aren't the problem, rag tail and thistle type weeds.
It's all mixed, I'm not sure how my family decided on that mix initially. My guess is to have a well rounded nutrient base without being too nutrient dense. I'm not even sure they have the right ratio.Is alphalpha the clover or is it mixed with annual clover or another perennial clover also? Timothy is an annual grass also isn't it? I am not used to seeing them mixed out here its usually aphalpha clover all alone. Or some one has a weed problem they are fighting. Thistle is an annual so spraying or manually removing plants before they go to seed is going to reduce your seed bank over time. If you are irrigating make sure you don't have more seeds coming in with the water. As mentioned above there are probably people in your area who have dealt with the same problem. What you are growing isn't going to be a lot like Bermuda grass. Whats your environment like? I.E inches of rain per year.
Soil test. Don't add expensive things blindly. You might ask some of your customers about their other sources of organic hay, and see if you can get some help from those growers.
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Organic Herbicides
Many gardeners across the state of South Dakota desire to have weed-free gardens, yards and flowerbeds. Many homeowners do not want to use inorganic herbicides due to their potential health effects.extension.sdstate.edu
SoilI'm going to add some lime to see if that helps a little bit.
Well, I been Farming 30 years. I don’t know a single person who puts up ‘clean’ hay that does not use Herbicides. Thats -0- There’s a huge difference between nutricious hay and growed up grass. Soil samples are a great tool. But if your soil sample calls for say 4 ton Lime/acre, you are wasting money putting 3 tons/acre. We try to cut 2250lbs/acre dry matter hay per cutting. In S Ark Bermuda is king on hay. Ea cutting will suck 33-40lbs of Potash. Potash is crucial for Bermuda hay production. We put chicken litter at 3 ton/acre yearly, then use potash and urea accordingly. Hay is expensive!!!
If there’s a few people that do hay in your area , it’s more likely cheaper to have it custom done. On the shares is even betterAnd that is before you start looking at the machines. The fucking bailer that always has issues, the tractors to cut, rake, and load the bails on the trailer, the truck to haul it to wherever. Then unload. This is not a one man job as well, or at least it is best if it is not.
I don't see how they can do it now with the fuel costs so high. So glad I don't anymore.
I am sure part of it is regional. We are in a good range PH wise for it mostly and it is dry enough to cure alfalfa in the field. A lot of clean alfalfa hay gets shipped all over the country from here. Are you sure your annual grass were a target species and not a weed?It's all mixed, I'm not sure how my family decided on that mix initially. My guess is to have a well rounded nutrient base without being too nutrient dense. I'm not even sure they have the right ratio.
The pH is a little low for the alfalfa which is why I was going to add the lime and hope it also helps with weed growth inhibition (weeds like a more acidic soil).
Between 30-40 inches of rain per year on average.