plant clover just by disking?
#11
You have put together a very good mixture thats for sure. If you do decide to plow and plant on the same day at least make sure you work the ground back down so there is not air pockets in the soil. Plow, disk good, pack it, then plant and pack again. I can't say it won't work, but that grass can be a problem.
#13
No! they will run to the next county and never come back again
You got to be joking. If nobody else is growing clover and its unlikely they will be growing that particular blend, you should see deer. IF every thing goes good planting and it keeps raining
#14
ORIGINAL: haystack
No! they will run to the next county and never come back again
You got to be joking. If nobody else is growing clover and its unlikely they will be growing that particular blend, you should see deer. IF every thing goes good planting and it keeps raining
No! they will run to the next county and never come back again
You got to be joking. If nobody else is growing clover and its unlikely they will be growing that particular blend, you should see deer. IF every thing goes good planting and it keeps raining
) and its been raining for a while now. ill take pics and let you know how it goes when i do it
thanks
#16
Sounds like a nice mixture, good luck to ya. I am also about tore-seed an area where the alfalfa seedlings were hurt by frost and only the clover is doing good. I'm just gonna make it all clover. Its getting late in the month, but I've had no time[:'(]
Good luck moss
Good luck moss
#19
ORIGINAL: haystack
Grass is one of the worst enemies of clover.
Grass is one of the worst enemies of clover.
#20
LittleChief, No offense taken!! The difference in your lawn and a food plot is much different, trying to get clover established with grass competition in a food plot is extremely difficult and one of the main reasons is, not gonna be using a lawnmower to keep it cut 1 in tall every week or so. Most desirable clovers for a food plot will not survive being cut low or that often. By not cutting a food plot but once or twice a year, it lets the grass out compete the clover for sunlight and nutrients, and eventually the grass will win.
Most likely, you have White Dutch Clover or Bur Clover in your lawn. And they can be extremely difficult to get rid of, they have an aggresive root system and they most likely have gone to seed many times and the seeds stay viable in the ground for a very long time.
If you use 2,4-D, make sure its not 2,4-Db. A 1/4 cup of 2,4-D per gal sprayed once per month should do it. Or look for chemicals with dicamba or MCPP (mecoprop) and once you kill the clover, (its gonna take awhile), you could use a pre-emergent herbicide to control the new seedlings from sprouting, such as Dimension, Pendulum, Surflan or Treflan.



