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Clovers

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

Pasturing
Japan clover is much used in providing grazing in the South....

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

Preparing The Soil
In preparing the seed-bed for crimson clover, the aim should...

Place In The Rotation
Japan clover can scarcely be classed as a rotation plant in ...

Fertilizers
On certain soils low in fertility and much deficient in humu...

Sainfoin
Sainfoin (Onobrychis sativa) is a perennial, leguminous, clov...

Sources Of Injury To Alfalfa
Chief among the sources of injury to alfalfa, after the plan...

Definition Of Clover
According to Johnson's Encyclopaedia, clover or trefoil is a...

Egyptian Clover
Egyptian clover (Trifolium Alexandrianum) is more commonly kn...

Soils
It was formerly thought by many that alfalfa would only grow ...

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

Securing Seed
Nearly all of the seed sown in this country is imported. The...

Harvesting For Hay
Ordinarily, the methods of making the hay crop are the same ...

Pasturing
Alsike clover has by some authorities been assigned to a hig...

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

Yellow Clover
Yellow clover (Medicago lupulina) is to be carefully distingu...

Harvesting For Hay
Medium red clover is at its best for cutting for hay when in...

Place In The Rotation
All the varieties of clover discussed in this volume may be ...

Place In The Rotation
Much of what has been said about the place for medium red cl...



Storing





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

Clovers are ready to store when enough moisture has left the
stems to prevent excessive fermentation when put into the place of
storage. Hay that has been cured in the cock is much less liable to heat
when stored so as to produce mould, than hay cured in the swath or
winrow. The former has already gone through the heating process or, at
least, partially so. Some experience is necessary to enable one to be
quite sure as to the measure of the fitness of hay for being stored.
When it can be pitched without excessive labor it is ready for being
stored, but the unskilled will not likely be able to judge of this
accurately. If a wisp is taken some distance from the top of the winrow
or cock and twisted between the hands, if moisture exudes it is too
damp, and if the hay breaks asunder readily it is too dry. When no
moisture is perceptible and yet the wisp does not break asunder, the hay
is ready to be drawn. Care must be taken that the wisp chosen be
representative of the mass of the hay. To make sure of this, the test
should be applied several times.

Where practicable the aim should be to store clover hay under cover,
owing to the little power which it has to shed rain in the stack. This
is only necessary, however, in climates with considerable rainfall
during the year and where irrigation is practised, as in the mountain
States clover hay may be kept in the stack without any loss from rain,
and it can be cured exactly as the ranchman may desire, since he is
never embarrassed when making hay by bad weather. When storing clovers,
the time of the day at which it is stored influences the keeping
qualities of the hay. Hay stored at noontide may keep properly, whereas,
if the same were stored while dew is falling it might be too damp for
being thus stored.

Much care should be taken in stacking clover hay that it may shed rain
properly. The following should be observed among other rules of less
importance that may be given: 1. Make a foundation of rails, poles or
old straw or hay that will prevent the hay near the ground from taking
injury from the ground moisture. 2. Keep the heart of the stack highest
from the first and the slope gradual and even from the center toward the
sides. 3. Keep the stack evenly trodden, or it will settle unevenly, and
the stack will lean to one side accordingly. 4. Increase the diameter
from the ground upward until ready to draw in or narrow to form the top.
5. Aim to form the top by gradual rather than abrupt narrowing. 6. Top
out by using some other kind of hay or grass that sheds the rain better
than clover. 7. Suspend weights to some kind of ropes, stretching over
the top of the stack to prevent the wind from removing the material put
on to protect the clover from rain.





Next: Feeding
Previous: Harvesting


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