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Alfalfa Planting

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ChuckKS

11-21-2000 19:25:13




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I need to know a good way of planting alfalfa. I have a 16 hole, 8 inch spaced IH drill and the ground is sandy. How do you plant and not go to deep. I have been told to pull the tubes and let the seed scatter and use drill chains and press wheels. Will this work or should I rethink this. I'm going to lime and work herbicide in and plant this spring. If somebody knows a good way to plant alfalfa I would appreciate some help. Thanks.

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paul

11-23-2000 20:34:56




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 Re: Alfalfa Planting in reply to ChuckKS, 11-21-2000 19:25:13  
You want about 15 lbs of seed placed about 1/4 inch deep in firm packed, but not hard soil that is very moist for a week after planting. How you get there is the hard part.

Sand is tough, it dries out too quick to get a good alfalfa stand.

Without a grass seeder on that drill, it will be very hard to set it to plant that little bit from the big hopper. You don't want to run the seed into the disk trench, it will get too deep.

Do you want a cover crop? Planted with 1-2 bu of oats per acre, it offers protection from washing & weeds, but slows the alfalfa the first year and can make a thin stand the first year. In a dry year it will rob the moisture & kill the alfalfa. You can cut the oats early for hay, and give the alfalfa a chance. However, you could mix the alfalfa in with the oat seed to help plant it. That's how some oldtimers did it, you need to 'know' (guess) how much to mix in, and the small alfalfa seeds will settle out & plant out sooner than all the oats.

A broadcast (spinner) seeder might work as well for you, & drag it with a harrow.

On sand, try to hit the rains, and get the lime & fert right. Level the grounds well before you plant, any bumps left will be there a long time. And the alfalfa like a very firm seedbed.

If you fail the first time, remember that those of us who planted for years have failures too with this crop - a lot depends on the weather. Try again.

--->Paul

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Matt

11-23-2000 09:45:33




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 Re: Alfalfa Planting in reply to ChuckKS, 11-21-2000 19:25:13  
Rent a Brillion seeder, they are designed for grass and alfalfa seeds. We only use that on hay seed. Works great, good placement and covering.



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Alvin

11-23-2000 08:59:31




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 Re: Alfalfa Planting in reply to ChuckKS, 11-21-2000 19:25:13  
Make sure you got a firm seedbed, if weeds are a problem have someone spray with eptan and cut the first time not any longer than 60 days after seeding. Make sure the PH is high enough to grow alfalfa or you are just throwin good money away.I Have seeded many acres , also the ground must not be steep or the spring rains will cause a lot of ditchs to wash out.



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BlueLight

11-23-2000 07:57:26




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 Re: Alfalfa Planting in reply to ChuckKS, 11-21-2000 19:25:13  
I'll be doing mine in the spring. They tell
me not to worry about the weeds. They say the
growth is practically explosive. Herbicide on sandy porous soil? Straight down
to the water table with nothing to stop it. I'd be worried about the wells in your area.



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Robert

11-22-2000 16:06:16




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 Re: Alfalfa Planting in reply to ChuckKS, 11-21-2000 19:25:13  
Around here most people broadcast the seed, and very lightly cover it with a disk, drag, or what ever they have. It works very well. Robert



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Ron

11-21-2000 20:46:19




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 Re: Alfalfa Planting in reply to ChuckKS, 11-21-2000 19:25:13  
I used an IH drill but it had a small grass seeder box in front. I pulled the tubes and let it scatter and the packer wheels press the seed. I placed the disks to barely touch the ground; mainly to engage the drive. I planted 14 pounds of seed. A nice hard surface to drill on is a must. Treflan is a good herbicide to hold back the weeds. Then hope for a rain to finish packing the seed down.

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