Annual and Perennial Winter Pasture Grass Choices
Annual Winter Pasture Grasses
These pastures include wheat and rye, with considerations for barley, annual
ryegrass, oats, and triticale. Along with bermudagrass, the winter pastures rank
high for horse forage.
The grasses can be planted on tilled land, sod-seeded into bermudagrass, or double-cropped
with crabgrass and other summer annual grasses. Combinations of bermudagrass or crabgrass and
well-managed winter pasture are an excellent nearly yearlong approach to horse pasture in Oklahoma.
Well-managed winter pastures can provide forage from November to late May or early June,
depending on the forage combinations. Rye will usually provide earlier grazing, regrow better during
cold, and produce excellent forage yield. Winter pastures can be greatly refined and fitted to individual needs.
These forages have to be established annually, which creates the disadvantage of being more
troublesome and costly. However, because they have a high nutritional value, the cost can be easily
offset when compared with the cost of purchased feeds. Additional information on cool-season
forages and horse performance can be found in the section on horse research on forage.
Varieties.
Cattle grazing studies show that oats are more palatable than wheat, wheat is
more palatable than rye, and rye is more palatable than barley. Cattle consume
all classes of small grains, and the same is true of horses. It is wise to plant
these in pure stands for horses, since they tend to be more selective grazers.
Intake of these lush forages will not likely decline if horses have access to
only one type at a time.
Most varieties of small grains are bred and selected for grain production, with forage being a
by-product. There are several good forage varieties of cereal rye: 'Bates', 'Bonel', 'Elbon', 'Oklon', and 'Maton'. These varieties can be expected to outproduce other small grains for fall and winter forage. They have the ability to grow at a lower temperature, which makes them dependable in a
grazing program. Of these forages, rye terminates spring production the earliest.
Most oat varieties lack winter hardiness to always survive Oklahoma's winter temperatures
when planted early for fall-winter pasture. Oats are not generally recommended for fall planting, but
they are dependable as spring planted pasture. Variety choices are limited.
Soft wheat grown in southern and southeastern Oklahoma and into Texas and Arkansas is
usually more productive than hard red winter wheat when planted early for fall pasture. Most
varieties of hard red winter wheat will produce stockpiled fall forage when planted early, but practically no winter forage regrowth occurs after mid-November. They produce abundant spring forage.
Proven hard red winter wheats are trustworthy and can be planted throughout Oklahoma and Texas
and adjoining regions. There are many acceptable varieties common in the seed trade.
Annual ryegrasses are an excellent choice for the southeastern two-thirds of Oklahoma,
Arkansas, and Texas. They can be easily established as pure stands in clean tilled fields or in grazedoff bermudagrass or crabgrass. They provide excellent forage from March to June. There are several excellent varieties. 'Marshall' is a proven winter-hardy type with high production. Other good varieties are 'Ribeye' and 'Jackson'.
Rescuegrass-type bromegrasses are available as 'Stocker' and 'Matua'. These grasses are
excellent horse pasture and hay. They can be managed for perpetual volunteer stands, as ryegrass and
crabgrass are. Stocker bromegrass can be green into summer up to a month after annual ryegrass matures.
Clovers and vetch can be a part of the spring to midsummer forage. They are discussed elsewhere.
A good combination is a mixture of cereal rye or a variety of winter wheat and annual
ryegrass or a winter legume. Under rotational grazing, this mixture will give a better distribution
than a single kind of forage through fall, winter, and spring. A mixture can be devised for any part of the south central United States.
Establishment Techniques.
The key to a successful clean-seedbed winter pasture is getting it established
as early in the fall as feasible and developing the plants as fast as practical
while fall weather is favorable for growth and fall stockpiling of forage. Moisture
and plant nutrition are the limiting factors in getting good stands and rapid
plant development.
The soil is a water reservoir for plant growth, so the management of the soil in relation to
available soil water becomes very important. In the drier areas of Oklahoma, it is necessary to plant
small grain for winter pasture as a single-season crop in either a tilled or chemical-fallow soil management regimen in order to have sufficient soil moisture for plant growth. Clean-till management of the soil would include a combination of tillage tools to control summer weeds, break up surface and subsoil compaction, and smooth and create a soil medium for excellent seed placement and early
plant growth.
Chemical fallow involves relying on a combination of herbicides to conserve moisture by
controlling vegetation. This method also depends on sufficient plant residue from the previous year
to provide a protective soil cover. The cover intercepts rain droplets to stop erosion and conserves
the moisture by reducing soil evaporation. Chemical fallow can be used on soils having more than a
3 percent slope if crop residue is maintained to control erosion.
The clean-till method of seedbed preparation has the disadvantage of depending on machinery.
To prevent soil erosion, clean till should be done only on land that has less than a 3 percent
slope. When using tilled pasture, remove (rotate) horses to be sure to allow pasture establishment
and control excessive destruction of the stand and forage production caused by somewhat continual
trailing, running, and overgrazing.
Overseeding winter forages into bermudagrass or crabgrass residue is a common practice for
the eastern two-thirds of Oklahoma, among other places. Overseeded winter pasture coupled with
proper fertilizer can produce economical winter and spring pasture. Research at the Noble Foundation
has shown that overseeded rye can be produced for about fifty dollars per ton of forage. Many
horse farms overseed pastures into bermudagrass because more extensive land area is unavailable for
tilled pastures.
Overseeding any cool-season annual grass into bermudagrass is often done with special
planting equipment that will place the seed in contact with the soil or into a furrow up to 1 inch deep. Broadcast planting or planting with a common drill can also be done successfully. Most no-till drills satisfactorily plant into a grass sod. The row opener of these drills should be placed behind a colter that cuts a slot through the grass sod. The disk row opener or narrow furrow opener will allow seed to be placed into the furrow. Press-wheel attachments following the row opener will press the soil against or over the seed to give it firm contact with the soil. Drills should have a fertilizer attachment so that a nitrogen-phosphorus starter fertilizer can be placed with the seed.
Row spacing is a consideration on some makes of drills. A 6- to 7-inch row spacing is better
than an 8- to 10-inch or wider spacing. All narrow spacings are considerably better than row spacings
wider than 10 inches.
Common grain drills and fertilizer spreaders can be used to effect a no-till drill planting,
which is especially applicable when more precise no-till drills are unavailable. The common drill
technique usually results in better stands than broadcast seeding does. Two bulletins available from
the Noble Foundation provide detail about the common drill and broadcast procedures: Low-Input
Overseeding, publication number NF-FO-99-17 (Dalrymple, 1999b), and Using Common Drills,
Fertilizer Spreaders, and Carriers to Plant Difficult Seeds, publication number NF-FO-99-15
(Dalrymple, 1999c).
Broadcast planting can be successful where drills are unavailable. Good stands of winter
pasture can be achieved by broadcasting seed into bermudagrass or other grass residues. Some kinds of winter pasture perform better in this case than others. Among the best tend to be cereal rye, barley, annual ryegrass, rescuegrass, hairy vetch, and crimson clover. Second-order success tends to come from wheat, oats, and triticale. Although the efficiency of getting a stand from broadcast plantings is lower than that with a drilled stand, broadcast stands can be successful. Noble Foundation personnel have broadcast-planted rye, annual ryegrass, and other forages in over 250 paddocks of bermudagrass residue over ten years with a high rate of stand success. Good fertilization and rotational grazing allows good pasture production from these broadcast-planted stands. Clovers or ryegrass can be broadcast-planted on the soil surface of clean tilled lands before or after drilling. On a clean-till seedbed, it is best that clover or ryegrass seed be slightly covered with 1/4 to 1/2 inch of soil, which protects the inoculant that is attached to the clover from direct sunlight. One ideal planting method is to mount an electric-motor-driven broadcast spreader on the front of the tractor so that seed are dropped in front of the drill. The drill disk, or row opener, can slightly cover some seed.
|