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Fall management tips to protect your alfalfa from winter injury

September 26, 2011
As the hot days of summer give way to cool fall temperatures, alfalfa growers are encouraged to consider winter injury risk when thinking about fall cutting.

“Growers really need to assess the risk versus the gain when it comes to fall cutting of alfalfa,” said Charles Scovill, Syngenta field agronomist. “While it may be tempting to take a final cutting late in the fall, you could be ultimately risking winter stand injury.”


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Small grain and forage pea mixtures: A forage option

September 23, 2011
Jim Isleib
In years when forages are in short supply, or winter-kill in alfalfa has been a problem, small grain/forage pea mixtures should be considered. For new alfalfa or mixed hay seedings, small grain/forage peas make a good companion crop, competing well with weeds and protecting vulnerable soils from erosion.
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Tips for frosted haylage management

September 15, 2011
Matt Laubach
With fall weather here, frost warnings are on the way. Producers often question the investment value of inoculating frosted forage that has been lying in a swath or windrow for several days. To determine the best course of action, assess the degree of damage to the crop. If you don’t see mold, ensiling is an option. However, if you see mold, ensiling may not be an option
When you are bailing as dry hay or disposal, there are two reasons to have a highly researched inoculant product on frosted forages:
1. Strains can quickly dominate fermentation over undesirable epiphytic (background) microbial populations that come in with the crop
2. Inoculants provide more efficient utilization of fermentation sugars on the crop
 
The ensiling process involves a bacterial population and a substrate source in the form of soluble sugars to produce sufficient concentrations of silage acids in an effort to reach a desirable terminal pH.
 
Laying hay in swaths or windrows for several days under certain conditions, such as rain, can cause leeching of the crop’s sugars. According to Pioneer’s technical service sample database, the average soluble sugar concentration of pre-ensiled alfalfa is 10 percent. Rainy weather, for example, will result in forages entering the silo with sugar levels at some concentration less than 10 percent. Frosting over an extended period could have a similar effect.
 
The bacterial population that comes with the crop, known as epiphytes, generally increases with frosted forages. This doesn’t mean the increased epiphytic colony-forming units (cfu) will make the crop ferment faster. In fact, many of the additional soilborne bacteria are inefficient at helping with fermentation and generate excessive heat during the ensiling process.
 
Highly researched bacteria in inoculants better utilize the remaining sugars in frosted forages, ensuring efficient fermentation. Relying on epiphytic populations that came with the crop can be inefficient and may exhaust the plant sugars before achieving a desirable terminal pH level.
 
Silage fermentation is a highly complex process dependent on many variables that are exacerbated by stresses such as frost. Epiphytes coming in with the crop are constantly changing, and inoculation minimizes the variability of this factor. Pioneer’s forage additive researchers select inoculants to work across a wide variety of conditions, and even outside of this range, these inoculants are better than gambling on nature.
One of the research criteria for choosing the strain combinations in inoculant products is their ability to dominate quickly over the epiphytic population coming in with the crop, resulting in highly efficient fermentation.
With fall weather here, frost warnings are on the way. Producers often question the investment value of inoculating frosted forage that has been lying in a swath or windrow for several days.
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Where do we go from here?

September 15, 2011
Lynn Olsen
A quick look at the current hay market reports from the USDA (see page 38) shows hay prices in most areas have sky-rocketed over the last few months.
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Autotoxicity in alfalfa: Causes, effects and solutions

September 15, 2011
Greg E. Blaser and Kristi M. Larsen
0711fg_blaser_fg_1The average stand of alfalfa lasts between five to six years. Once it becomes evident through stand and stem evaluation, or through increased pest population, that the alfalfa stand needs to be replaced, the grower should consider some potential problems with replanting a new crop too quickly. University studies have shown that there should be a minimum of one year before re-establishing alfalfa because of autotoxicity in existing alfalfa.
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0711fg hoffman 1 full

Forage sampling frequency as influenced by dairy herd size

September 15, 2011
Paul Dyk, Patrick Hoffman, and Randy Shaver
The practice of forage sampling and analysis has long been the foundation for dairy nutrition consulting and ration formulation.
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Glowing corn field

Frequently asked questions for forage testing

September 15, 2011
Brad Nelson
First off, a quick review of the basics. Then I’ll answer some of the questions I hear regularly concerning forage testing and the results.
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Cutting management for cool-season forage grasses

September 15, 2011
Phil Kaatz
The height and frequency that you harvest grass can affect yield, quality and the longevity of your grass hayfields and pastures.
Read More
Karl Zweifel and his son, Hal

No-till drilling improves grass stands

September 15, 2011
Alisa Anderson Raty

In Tillamook County, Oregon, where they get approximately 90 inches of rain every year, farmers use no-till drilling as a management tool in that area to increase the productivity of their pastures.

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0711fg caddel 1 full

Forage legumes and nitrogen production

September 15, 2011
John Caddel, Jeff Edwards, Daren D. Redfearn, and Hailin Zhang
Recent increases in the cost of nitrogen (N) fertilizer are causing crop and pasture managers to reconsider the use of legume species for their long-known ability to fix N for themselves and other crops.
Read More
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