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CRP Grass
Living in Northern Michigan, I wasn't really exposed to CRP Grass untill I went on a western hunting trip a few years back. I was really impressed with how well that tall grass(6-8') held deer. I'm hoping that some of those grasses will grow hear as well. Can anyone tell methe specific name of the grass/grasses?
Thanks!! Keith |
RE: CRP Grass
CRP stands for Conservation Reserve Program. I think its a mixture of mostly switchgrass, here's a link that might help. Just cut and paste it.
http://www.newfarm.org/news/2005/0805/082305/swtichgrass.shtml |
RE: CRP Grass
Nevermind you can click on the link, it wasn't working before as a link but now it is.
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RE: CRP Grass
Thanks! I've always know what CRP stood for. I just couldn't figure out what grass mixtures they were, if anything specific.
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RE: CRP Grass
Check out www.sharpbro.com. They are a native grass company here in Kansas. They furnish a lot of the grasses that the farmers here use for CRP. Hope it helps.
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RE: CRP Grass
Keith,
You might try your local pheasants forever chapter, I live in Ohio and when I planted my 20 acres of tall warm season grasses ( Indian grass, Big blue stem, and Switch grass) my local chapter provided the seeds. |
RE: CRP Grass
I wish I could. We don'thave pheasant here, so i'm guessingnot a pheasants forever chapter either. The're more in mid to southern michigan.
Thanks for all the help! Keith |
RE: CRP Grass
If there are quail in your area you may be able to enroll in the quail initiative program that allows land owners to plant short native grasses along creeks, fence rows, tree rows, etc. from 30' strips up to 100'. It is a program much like CRP, but it was just startedthis year, I beleive. I enrolled my land in KS. in it! The grasses they allow to be planted are the shorter variaties that quial thrive in! It is a cost share program to get it establsihed, and pays a small amount per acreto the landowner each year, again much likeCRP.
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RE: CRP Grass
Switchgrass is the most expensive and difficult to maintain,but man does it hold the deer! It's generally tall and dense,and when located near a food/water source..... WOW!
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