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Clovers

Seaside Clover
Seaside clover (Trifolium invulneratum) has rendered some ser...

Storing
When cured in cocks, these are preferably made small to faci...

Renewing
Because of the comparatively short life of several of the mo...

For Lawns
No other plant of the clover family is so frequently sown wh...

Pasturing
Mammoth clover furnishes much pasture when it is grazed, on ...

Renewing
Since this plant is an annual, it cannot be renewed in the s...

Place In The Rotation
Burr clover is grown more in the sense of a catch crop and f...

Harvesting For Hay
Crimson clover is ready to be cut for hay when coming into, ...

Pasturing
White clover ranks next to blue grass as a pasture plant wit...

Harvesting
All the varieties of clover, except alfalfa, are best cut fo...

Buffalo Clover
Buffalo clover (Trifolium stoloniferum) is a native species p...

Storing
Clovers are ready to store when enough moisture has left the ...

Place In The Rotation
In a certain sense it can scarcely be said of alfalfa that i...

Distribution
Burr clover is said to be native to Europe and North Africa,...

Pasturing
When clover seed is sown in nurse crops that are matured bef...

Sweet Clover
Sweet clover is so named from the sweet odor which emanates...

Preparing The Soil
Speaking in a general way, it would be correct to say that i...

Renewing
White clover is probably more easily renewed than any plant ...

Sowing With Or Without A Nurse Crop
Nearly all varieties of clover are usually sown with a nurse...

Facts Regarding Crimson Clover
1. When crimson clover is sown so early in the season that i...



Depth To Bury The Seed





Category: SOME GENERAL PRINCIPLES WHICH APPLY TO THE GROWING OF CLOVERS

The depth to bury the seed varies with the
conditions of soil, climate and season. Clover seeds, like those of
grasses, are buried most deeply in the light soils of the prairie so
light that they sink, so as to make walking over them unusually tiresome
when working on newly plowed land, and in other instances so light as to
lift with the wind. On such soils the seeds may be buried to the depth
of 2 to 3 inches. On loam soils, a covering of 1 inch or less would be
ample, and on stiff clays the covering may even be lighter under normal
conditions.

Clover seeds are buried more deeply in dry than in moist climates, and
also more deeply in dry portions of the year than when moisture is
sufficient. While it may be proper in some instances to scatter the
seeds on the surface without any covering other than is furnished by
rain or frost, it will be very necessary at other seasons to provide a
covering to insure a stand of the seed.

When clover seed is sown on ground honeycombed with frost, no covering
is necessary. When sown on winter grain in the spring, the ground not
being so honeycombed, covering with the harrow is usually advantageous.
When sown on spring crops and early in the season, it may not be
necessary to cover the seed, except by using the roller, even though the
seed should fall behind the grain tubes while the grain crop is being
sown, or should be sown subsequently by hand. In other instances the
harrow should be used, and sometimes both the roller and the harrow.
Under conditions such as appertain to New England and the adjacent
States to Ontario and the provinces east and to the land west of the
Cascade Mountains, clover and also grass seeds do not require so much of
a covering as when sown on the prairie soils of the central portion of
the continent.





Next: Sowing Alone Or In Combinations
Previous: Methods Of Sowing


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