If you love something, set it free. If it comes back, it was and always will be yours. If it never returns, it was never yours to begin with. If, however, it just sits in your living room, messes up your stuff, eats your food, uses your t... Read more of If you love something at Free Jokes.caInformational Site Network Informational.ca
Privacy

   Home - Clovers - Categories

Clovers

Adaptation In Clovers
Adaptation in the varieties of clover considered will be mor...

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

Value On Alkali Soils
This plant has been grown to some extent to aid in removing ...

Sowing
Usually, burr clover is allowed to re-seed itself after it h...

Sowing
The time for sowing clover seed is influenced considerably by...

Some General Principles Which Apply To The Growing Of Clovers
In growing clovers, as in growing other crops of the same s...

Distribution
White clover is certainly indigenous to Europe and to the No...

Preparing The Soil
In preparing the soil for alfalfa the aim should be to make ...

Plan Of Discussion
Chapter I., that is, the present chapter, as already indicat...

Bacteria And Clovers
The fact has long been known, even as long ago as the days o...

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

Securing Seed
Localities differ much in their capacity to produce alfalfa ...

Securing Seed
White clover is a great seed-producing plant. The season for...

Pasturing
Medium red clover will furnish grazing very suitable for any...

Distribution
Japan clover is said to be native to China and other countri...

Distinguishing Characteristics
Clovers differ from one another in duration, habit of growth...

Securing Seed
Alsike is a great producer of seed. This arises in part from...

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

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

Miscellaneous Varieties Of Clover
In addition to the varieties of clover that have been discu...



Renewing





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

Because of the comparatively short life of several of the
most useful of the varieties of clover, no attempt is usually made to
renew them when they fail, unless when growing in pasture somewhat
permanent in character. To this, however, there may be some exceptions.
On certain porous soils it has been found possible to maintain medium
red clover and also the mammoth and alsike varieties for several years
by simply allowing some of the seed to ripen in the autumn, and in this
way to re-seed the land, a result made possible through moderate grazing
of the meadow in the autumn, and in some instances through the absence
of grazing altogether, as when the conditions may not be specially
favorable to the growth of clover.

It is not uncommon, however, to renew alfalfa, by adding more seed when
it is disked in the spring, as it sometimes is to aid in removing weeds
from the land. The results vary much with the favorableness of the
conditions for growing alfalfa or the opposite.

In pastures more or less permanent in character, clovers may be renewed
by disking the ground, adding more clover seed, and then smoothing the
surface by running over it the harrow, and in some instances also the
roller. This work is best done when the frost has just left the ground
for a short distance below the surface.

Some kinds of clover are so persistent in their habit of growth that
when once in the soil they remain, and therefore do not usually require
renewal. These include the small white, the yellow, the Japan, burr
clover and sweet clover. In soils congenial to these respective
varieties, the seeds usually remain in the soil in sufficient quantities
to restock the land with plants when it is again laid down to grass.
Nearly all of these varieties are persistent seed producers; hence, even
though grazed, enough seed is formed to produce another crop of plants.





Next: Clovers As Soil Improvers
Previous: Feeding


Add to del.icio.us Add to Reddit Add to Digg Add to Del.icio.us Add to Google Add to Furl Add to Stumble Upon
Add to Informational Site Network
Report
Privacy
SHAREBOOKMARK


Viewed: 995