Our Pasture mix is a blend of Wheat and Rye. The addition of Rye provides earlier forage and more forage potential during the colder growing period.
Planting Time | Planting Depth | Planting Rate |
Late summer or early fall. | 1-2″ | Drilled 60-120 lb. |
$18.50 /50 lbs (50 pound bag)
Our Pasture mix is a blend of Wheat and Rye. The addition of Rye provides earlier forage and more forage potential during the colder growing period.
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Our Pasture mix is a blend of Wheat and Rye. The addition of Rye provides earlier forage and more forage potential during the colder growing period.
Planting Time | Planting Depth | Planting Rate |
Late summer or early fall. | 1-2″ | Drilled 60-120 lb. |
Weight | 50 lbs |
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Dimensions | 29 × 17 × 7 in |
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Cool-season annual vine that is smooth and has a bluish-green waxy appearance. Vines can be up to 9 ft. long, however modern cultivars have shorter vines, about 2 ft. long.
Forage oat that has good disease tolerance, straw strength, good grazer.
New rust-resistant, a cultivar of white-flowered, annual sweetclover (Melilotus albus Medik.) adapted to the south and central Texas.
Triticale is a man made plant by crossing Cereal Rye with Wheat. It contains many of the attributes of wheat and rye due to this fact. However, there is no real use for the grain and its use is limited to forage purposes for livestock.
Barley has been grown in many regions. Barley is an excellent grain to feed and produces excellent forage for livestock and wildlife. In many areas there is not a cash market for the grain which has limited its use to mixes for pasture and wildlife.
Best when planted late summer or early fall and incorporated 1 to 2 inches in the soil. 50 lbs if drilling in poor soils, if broadcasting increase rate by 25%, if in good soils with good moisture drill at 100 lbs.
An upright, cool-season, reseeding annual legume originating from Euraia that grows to a height of 40 to 50 inches under good conditions. Seeds germinate in the fall, but grow slowly during the winter.
VNS Rye is a variety not stated cereal rye. Normally this indicates an Northern Cereal Rye which produces less forage than the Southern types. Do not confuse with ryegrass or southern cereal rye.
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