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Livestock & Forage
Large leaved W clover
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<blockquote data-quote="ollie989898" data-source="post: 7920253" data-attributes="member: 54866"><p>Grass silage can be high protein anyway so it is sort of academic having clover which shows a bit higher in CP in an analysis.</p><p></p><p>I would not grow continuous clover any more than I would continuous grass- after a number of years the weed grasses creep in and it becomes expensive to be throwing nitrogen at them when they don't grow half as much as actual sown species.</p><p></p><p>Rotation is important and everyone's grandad knew it. Roots, kale or a cereal crop between leys and legumes always pays.</p><p></p><p>I wonder if a low rate of very small leafed white clover might be ok with red clover above it. Establish in spring under a low rate spring barley or oat crop.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ollie989898, post: 7920253, member: 54866"] Grass silage can be high protein anyway so it is sort of academic having clover which shows a bit higher in CP in an analysis. I would not grow continuous clover any more than I would continuous grass- after a number of years the weed grasses creep in and it becomes expensive to be throwing nitrogen at them when they don't grow half as much as actual sown species. Rotation is important and everyone's grandad knew it. Roots, kale or a cereal crop between leys and legumes always pays. I wonder if a low rate of very small leafed white clover might be ok with red clover above it. Establish in spring under a low rate spring barley or oat crop. [/QUOTE]
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Large leaved W clover
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