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 08-24-2009, 07:49 Post: 165200
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 Winter rye

Never actually heard of "winter" rye myself. But then I'm not familiar with agriculture practices in the Northeast. I use what's referred to around here as "cover crop" wheat. It's winter wheat in the sense that it's bred to survive under snow and ice. But given it's lower price (than "regular" winter wheat), it's apparently a lower grade. Less yield or something maybe.

Livestock producers will drill it into harvested row crop acreage, fields that would otherwise sit idle over winter. When the stand is high enough, they'll turn their livestock out to graze in it like regular pasture. I use it to control winter/spring erosion in problem areas of my pastures, usually broadcasting or drilling between 15 Sep and 30 Oct. Up your way you'd probably want to start earlier though, to permit a reasonable root system to develop before otherwise killing frosts move in.

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 08-25-2009, 09:01 Post: 165245
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 Winter rye

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Originally Posted by Hettric | view 165242
A friend also suggested clover.

Forget clover, besides being comparatively quite expensive - it takes years to develop a self-sustaining stand. Besides, it won't develop a root system fast enough to even hold itself in place. Expensive seed and seedlings will end up somewhere that they're not needed. Even in mature stands, clover has a narrow pH window - and quickly goes dormant during extended periods of heat, cold, low rainfall.

The most common (and reasonably priced) erosion control variety around here is tall fescue. Not regular fescue, tall fescue. It's a perennial, so must be planted earlier than an annual like cover crop wheat or rye. But once estableshed, it has one of the strongest and deepest root systems of all native grasses.

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