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Clovers

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

Soils
Japan clover is adapted to a wide range of soils. There would...

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

Renewing
When clover is grown for hay, it is not usual to try to rene...

Renewing
Much that has been said with reference to the renewing of me...

Distribution
Sweet clover is probably indigenous to the semi-arid regions...

Soils
Small white clover will grow on almost any kind of soil, but ...

Burr Clover
Burr Clover (Medicago maculata) is sometimes called Spotted...

Place In The Rotation
Since sweet clover seed is more commonly scattered in byplac...

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

Varieties
At least twenty varieties, native or naturalized, are found ...

Sowing
White clover is sown by much the same methods as the medium ...

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

Pasturing
Opinions differ as to the palatability of this grass. All ar...

As A Fertilizer
The growing of burr clover exercises a beneficial influence ...

Soils
Mammoth clover may usually be successfully grown in soils wel...

Seasons For Sowing
Clovers are more commonly sown in the springtime in the Nort...

Japan Clover
Japan Clover (Lespedeza striata) was introduced from China ...

Preparing The Soil
Since burr clover has much power to re-seed the land without...

Soils
The most suitable soil for alsike clover is a moist clay loam...



Harvesting For Hay





Category: ALFALFA

Crimson clover is ready to be cut for hay when
coming into, and a little before it is in, fullest bloom. Some
authorities claim that it should be harvested when the blooms begin to
appear. It should certainly not be allowed to pass the stage of full
bloom, lest the hay when cured should prove hurtful to horses and
possibly to other live stock, because of the presence of hair balls,
which are then liable to form from the hairs so numerously found on this
plant. These balls produce death by forming an impermeable wedge in the
intestines of horses, thereby impeding and in some instances totally
arresting the process of digestion. These balls, almost circular in
form, are composed of minute and rather stiff hairs, and several have
been found in one animal. These hairs, numerous on the heads; do not
stiffen sooner than the period of full bloom; hence, until that stage is
reached in the growth of the plants, the danger from feeding cured hay
made from them does not occur.

In New Jersey and the neighboring States, crimson clover is ready for
being cut sometimes in May earlier or later, as the season is early or
late. Further South it is fit to harvest earlier. At that season it is
not easily cured, since then rains are more frequent than in the
ordinary harvest season and the weather is less drying. Consequently,
hay caps may frequently be used with much advantage by the growers of
this hay. (See page 98.)

It is harvested as other clover; that is, it is cut with the field
mower, raked when wilted, put up into cocks, and left to stand in these
until it has gone through the sweating process, when the cocks are
opened out again on a bright day for a few hours prior to drawing them.
The tedder should be used freely in getting the hay ready to rake, as at
that season of the year it dries slowly.





Next: Securing Seed
Previous: Pasturing


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