1boardrider
Member
You planted the buckwhear at 20 lbs per acre — how much per acre of the soybeans?I planted my buckwheat and soybeans at the same time last year - first week of May.
You planted the buckwhear at 20 lbs per acre — how much per acre of the soybeans?I planted my buckwheat and soybeans at the same time last year - first week of May.
It wasn't pure soybeans, but a mix of beans and cowpeas, as an experiment. I think I went 20 lbs buckwheat, 30 soybeans, 30 cowpeas broadcast onto turned bare dirt and then drug with chain harrow to cover. And honestly, I will probably go heavier for any all soybean plots this spring.You planted the buckwhear at 20 lbs per acre — how much per acre of the soybeans?
Thank you.It wasn't pure soybeans, but a mix of beans and cowpeas, as an experiment. I think I went 20 lbs buckwheat, 30 soybeans, 30 cowpeas broadcast onto turned bare dirt and then drug with chain harrow to cover. And honestly, I will probably go heavier for any all soybean plots this spring.
How did this particular plot mentioned above turn out?It wasn't pure soybeans, but a mix of beans and cowpeas, as an experiment. I think I went 20 lbs buckwheat, 30 soybeans, 30 cowpeas broadcast onto turned bare dirt and then drug with chain harrow to cover. And honestly, I will probably go heavier for any all soybean plots this spring.
I was amazed at how well the generic RR soybeans did. They grew quite well even in my less-than-optimal soil. I probably will not bother with the cowpeas again.How did this particular plot mentioned above turn out?
What I see from both spring and fall plantings of buckwheat (seems) to me is that springtime has many other more nutritious and palatable foods and buckwheat only gets hit in its earliest growth stage. Augaust or September planted buckwheat is more palatable than natives and spring planted crops due to the fact that they have hardened and built tannins and acids effectively moving buckwheat up on the menu's. The browse also encourages suckers making the crop thicker and causing the plant to make a big push for seed production!I've been planting buckwheat in my fall plots for years. The first frost will kill it, but I'm using it as a "cover crop" to protect the plants I really want in my fall/winter mix. Deer go crazy over the buckwheat in September and October.
But here's the weird thing, I planted it in a bunch of new plots last May 1, as a soil builder. It grew. But deer hardly touched it. No idea why. But until I figure that out, I may not plant it again as a summer crop.
Makes a lot of sense Popcorn. I tend to plant my fall plots much earlier than others (mid-August). A that time, most other summer food sources are "toughening up" (higher lignin, lower digestibility). Deer really flock to the newly germinated buckwheat. They are still pounding it hard into mid and late September.What I see from both spring and fall plantings of buckwheat (seems) to me is that springtime has many other more nutritious and palatable foods and buckwheat only gets hit in its earliest growth stage. Augaust or September planted buckwheat is more palatable than natives and spring planted crops due to the fact that they have hardened and built tannins and acids effectively moving buckwheat up on the menu's. The browse also encourages suckers making the crop thicker and causing the plant to make a big push for seed production!
JMHO