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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Food Plots
Green manure for poor-soil food plots
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<blockquote data-quote="Popcorn" data-source="post: 5417996" data-attributes="member: 20151"><p>This is awesome BSK! Glad to see this, I am a big fan of green manure! I have had sun hemp in my blends for several years now and it breaks down a little slow if on top but is not a problem. I don't till so I cannot speak to how it will act with a tiller but once dry it's fragile and brittle. I find that if it has entered bloom stage before you mow it you will see very little regeneration. I drill thru my standing summer crops and the sun hemp usually breaks over and is done. Some will remain but first frost gets it. My late planted sun hemp down in Stewart county is getting hammered right now along with the buckwheat, sunflowers and beans.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Popcorn, post: 5417996, member: 20151"] This is awesome BSK! Glad to see this, I am a big fan of green manure! I have had sun hemp in my blends for several years now and it breaks down a little slow if on top but is not a problem. I don’t till so I cannot speak to how it will act with a tiller but once dry it’s fragile and brittle. I find that if it has entered bloom stage before you mow it you will see very little regeneration. I drill thru my standing summer crops and the sun hemp usually breaks over and is done. Some will remain but first frost gets it. My late planted sun hemp down in Stewart county is getting hammered right now along with the buckwheat, sunflowers and beans. [/QUOTE]
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Green manure for poor-soil food plots
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