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Have you ever stopped to consider the cost associated with haying bermudagrass? Include fertilizer inputs, swathing, raking, baling and labor, and it can quickly add up to $30 a ton or more. With this kind of investment, it is important to implement proper management to assure a positive return. Fertilizer management I recommend frequent soil tests to monitor soil nutrient levels and to make sure enough fertilizer is applied to meet the desired yield goal. Bermudagrass requires a lot of nutrients to yield a ton of forage. If fertility is not replaced, eventually the soil will be depleted of essential plant nutrients, which results in declining yields and increased weed problems. A proper balance of nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium and other nutrients is essential for improving nitrogen use efficiency. Fertilizing directly from soil test results is the best way to maintain a balanced system. A good analogy is your truck. Let's say that nitrogen is gasoline, phosphorus is the battery and potassium is oil. Every time you pull into the station to fill your tank with gas, you don't change the battery and the oil. The battery and oil are important in the operation of the truck, but the gasoline is what makes it run. Nitrogen makes the plant grow. The ratio of N, P and K removed from the field in a ton of bermudagrass is approximately 4 to 1 to 3 more nitrogen is needed to produce a ton of forage than phosphorus or potassium. However, if phosphorus and/or potassium are limiting, then nitrogen inputs won't be fully utilized. Forage quality
Stubble height Let's imagine that you are a kid mowing yards for the summer. One customer in town always wants her yard cut as short as possible. Why? Because she does not care about its appearance as much as she does about having to pay for it to be mowed. By mowing it short, it will be mowed less often through the summer, which is cheaper. Another customer is very particular about his yard. He wants it to be the prettiest in town and in perfect condition all summer, regardless of the cost. You will mow his yard weekly at a higher setting. Why? Because a higher setting will leave more leaf area, or "factory," for plant re-growth, and it also looks prettier. Through the summer you will make more money from the second yard due to the fact you are mowing it higher, which leaves more leaf and causes it to re-grow quicker, and as a result it has to be mowed more often. In your pasture, you may slightly reduce your total yield per cutting, but you may get an extra cutting per year by cutting higher. Leaving a good stubble height also provides shade and cools the soil surface, creating an environment less favorable for weed germination. If you practice good soil fertility and forage harvest management, you should be able to sustain a quality level of hay production while reducing the need for herbicide inputs over time. |
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© 1997-2008 by The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc.
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