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Tropical Corn | ||
No Pioneer Quit Producing It For ducks, deer, quail and doves. A warm season annual from South America. Can tolerate high temperatures, stress and drought. Can grow up to 8 ft. tall. For deer plant next to wood's edge and leave standing. For turkey and quail allow seeds to fall naturally or knock down by hand or with mower. For doves mow in strips to provide scattered seeds and clean ground. If broadcast mix 8 to 10 lbs. corn with 5 lbs. Cooper's Hyb. Sorghum. If planted in rows alone use 10 to 15 lbs. per acre. Plant May, June and July. Buy 1 lb. for only $. In tests at the Upper Coastal Plain Substation in Winfield, Auburn researchers planted tropical corn on June 15, and harvested up to 85 bushels per acre. Across the state, at the Sand Mountain Substation in Crossville, researchers recorded up to 65 bushels per acre from tropical corn planted in a rotation with reseeding crimson clover. Yields at the Sand Mountain Substation were reduced by dry weather in August and the earliest frost on record, according to Auburn researcher Wayne Reeves, who is a USDA agronomist and adjunct researcher with the Experiment Station. He noted that preliminary studies indicate that June 7-20 will be good "windows" of planting time in north Alabama for currently available tropical corn varieties. In central and south Alabama, these optimal dates appear to be from June 14 to early July. Be sure to wash your hands after planting or handling any treated seeds! Please Type In The Amount You Need In The Quantity Box. NOT AVAILABLE FOR THE YEAR 2012 | ||
Quantity: lbs. | Temporarily Out of Stock | |
PENN BIG BUCK BEANS | ||
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Same As Hutchinson Soybeans Deer love them. Sow 60 lbs. per acre and cover about one inch deep. Requires Innoculant. 5 bu. lb. Size $9.99 If You Want This Please click on the following link. Click here to order innoculant. 50 lb Bag $25.50 Fertilizer=Results! Annual Legume Plant For Quail And Deer. 2012 SEED Please Type In The Amount You Need In The Quantity Box. | |
Quantity: | Temporarily Out of Stock | |
HUTCHINSON SOYBEANS | ||
SAME AS PENN BIG BUCK BEANS Deer love them. Sow 60 lbs. per acre and cover about one inch deep. Requires Innoculant. 5 bu. lb. Size $9.99. If You Want This Please click on the following link. Click here to order innoculant. 50 lb. Bag $25.50 Fertilizer=Results! Annual Legume Plant For Quail And Deer. 2012 SEED Please Type In The Amount You Need In The Quantity Box. | ||
Quantity: | Temporarily Out of Stock | |
Tyrone Forage Soybeans | ||
IN STOCK Food Plots and Forage Soybeans NOT ROUND UP READY SOYBEANS Sep 28, 2001 12:00 PM By David Bennett Farm Press Editorial Staff SENATOBIA, Miss. A few days ago, a man who walked into this field may have thought he'd stumbled into a fairytale land of giants. Tyrone soybean plants were so high that seeing the hardwoods ringing the field even from a pick-up cab was impossible. The bushy variety, which can grow from 5 feet to 7 feet tall depending on the soil variety it's planted in, blotted out the horizon. Then 2.5 inches of rain hit quickly, pounding the giant soybean plants into a matted (although still 3-foot-tall) lush, pod-heavy carpet. Fertilizer=Results! These are the giant soybeans you have been looking for to feed your deer. Deer eat them and they keep coming back. More drought resistant. 2012 SEED Plant 40 lbs. per acre. 40 lb. bag for only $42.95 Requires Soybean Inoculant Click here to order innoculant. To get shipping quote enter amount needed in Qty. box then click “Add to Shopping Cart”. Then enter your Zip Code and click on “Get Quotes”. | ||
Quantity: | Temporarily Out of Stock | |
SECADA PEAS | ||
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An exciting new variety of forage peas has hit the U.S. Leafy, highly palatable, self-climbing, with high dry matter yields, SECADA peas can be used in a wide range of applications. A fast growing, cool-season annual legume, SECADA peas perform very well during the fall, winter, and spring in the southern states, with good frost tolerance. In more northern climes, an early spring plant will give high dry matter yields of excellent forage. SILAGE: SECADA peas, mixed with cereals, makes excellent silage. A study comparing Pea/Wheat silage with grass silage showed a 34% increase in forage dry matter intake, resulting in a 19% increase in milk production. Silage is normally cut at the late pod-swell stage for highest yields with the greatest nutrient concentration. GRAZING: SECADA peas can be grazed by most livestock species. Strip grazing will maximize utilization of the crop. With relatively high tannin content, peas are less likely to cause bloat than other legumes, but animals should be introduced to the forage gradually, as with any change of feed. WILDLIFE FOOD PLOTS: SECADA peas are an excellent choice for wildlife food plots. Sown in the early spring, highly palatable forage is available for the energy and protein needs of developing antlers and milking does. Turkey and quail love the soft, tender leaves. Sown in early fall, especially with oats or ryegrass, SECADA PEAS will make fence-jumpers of all your neighbors' deer. SEEDING RATES: Secada peas alone: 80-120 lbs/acre Secada peas/oats: 50-80 lbs/acre peas, 50-80 lbs/acre oats Secada peas/ryegrass: 50-80 lbs/acre peas, 10-15 lbs/acre ryegrass Optimum seedbed conditions will ensure good germination and emergence. Drill the peas about one inch deep. Secada peas will also work well under a minimum tillage situation. 50 LB BAG $41.95 NOT AVAILABLE | |
Quantity: | Temporarily Out of Stock | |
Silver Mine O.P. Corn | ||
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Silver Mine has round ears that taper at the end, with small white cobs, and kernels that are of medium width and depth with a smooth to rough dent. Its stalks and foliage are not as heavy as other varieties. Matures in 98 to 105 days. DROPPED VARIETY, SEED SUPPLY IS NOT AVAILABLE. | |
Quantity: | Temporarily Out of Stock | |
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