December 2012, Winter Forage Rotations

For a number of these newsletters I have been bringing the results of our many research projects at the Cornell Valatie Research Farm in Eastern NY. The focus has been on high yielding, very high quality forage that can support dairy rations encompassing greater than 70% forage in the diet and high milk production with high components, critical to leveraging profit back into dairying.  NONE are silver bullets.  All have to operate within the farm system, soils, and labor/equipment resources you have

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October 2012, Wet forage

With the nearly every day shower for the past couple of weeks, fall harvest of forage is ever more challenging.   The biggest limit on the use of oats in the fall is weather like we have had where it mists or rains nearly every day.  This, coupled with the cool temperatures, shorter day length, and less intense sunshine as it is lower on the horizon, add a dollop of high yielding (6 to 10 ton) silage, makes a perfect storm for not drying to 35%.

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Sept. 2012, Fall Kill, Short Season Corn

Move NOW to fall kill your sods. Spraying sods in the fall catches most tough perennials when they are trans-locating into their root systems for winter storage. This brings the herbicide to the deep root systems, where it does the most good. We have consistently gotten excellent results with ammonium sulfate, 0.75 quart of glyphosate or its equivalent, and a quart of 2,4,D.

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May 2012 / The Crazy Season

The season continues on its crazy path of very warm days.  In my last letter we discussed the alfalfa and grasses going out of sync for harvest.  Unfortunately, that effect has continued.  The normal cutting schedule based on alfalfa height is now skewed.  Samples over a wide area show the alfalfa at a much more immature stage than the heat units indicate.  The grasses continue to race past maturity.  The recommendation to stop corn planting and mow grass in areas to the north of Albany, NY latitude continues.

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April, 2012 / Haycrop/Planting Season = Sum of Extremes.

The 2012 season in the Northeast has started out with a bang.  From a  March that brought 80+F and 23 F a week later; and April that hit 90 and 29 in three days; it has been a rollercoaster.  We had less than a 1/3 of an inch of rain for all of March and up to  April 21.

Plants started to grow fast and then were frozen off.  Growth of all crops slowed to a halt as they ran out of water.  The recent rain spurred rapid growth which nearly halted in the cold weather since April 20.

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March, 2012 / New research to prevent nitrogen loss from early spring application

New Research to Prevent Nitrogen Losses From Early Spring Applications
With the shortage of forage, as I mentioned in the January newsletter, the earliest crops to refill the silos are cool season grasses or winter forages such as triticale, with nitro-gen applied. It is an economical use of nitrogen and will give the most rapid return on in-vestments. In research and on-farm results, nitrogen TRIPLED the total yearly yields on perennial grasses where it was applied.

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February, 2012 / Frost Tillage: use winter to get a jump on spring

Critical Seed Corn
You are not the only one to have been hit by very bad weather this year, the corn seed industry has been hit even harder. Do not think it is business as usual. You will need to get your order in early AND TAKE DELIVERY EARLY. There are a number of farms that may not have their order filled or at least have it filled by something very different. Take delivery as soon as possible. There is little or no fall-back supplies

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