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Summer Annual Forage Options For The Panhandle

Mar 10, 2014

Summer annual seed is often readily available and there are some very good varieties on the market. More information on planting and management of these crops can be found in:  Producing Millets and Sorghums SS-AGR-89

Pearl millet should not be confused with Japanese millet, browntop millet, or proso millet. These are short growing millets, popular in wildlife plantings or for quick cover to prevent soil erosion. Forage yields of these millets are considerably lower than that of pearl millet and are not usually recommended for livestock forage plantings.

Some of the forage sorghums and sorghum-sudangrass hybrids now have the brown midrib (BMR) trait, which enhances the digestibility of the forage by as much as 40%. Sudangrass is a finer grass than sorghum-sudangrass and generally its forage is lower yielding.

Crabgrass is a fine-stemmed grass that can be grazed or cut for hay. In the Panhandle, it often volunteers in fields that have recently been tilled. Crabgrass can be planted, however, but commercial varieties are limited to “Red River” and “Quick and Big” crabgrass.  Crabgrass mixes very well with legumes and other types of summer grasses. It is very palatable and has excellent forage quality with CP at about 14% and % IVDMD in the upper 70s (78-79%) when grazed or cut for hay in the vegetative stage. As the plant matures, as with most grasses, its forage quality declines.

Planting crabgrass fits well in open land situations where planting annual winter forages, such as ryegrass, oats, rye or wheat, for early grazing is the goal. The periods for winter annuals and crabgrass are complementary and allow for slight overlap in seasonal forage production. Shallow tillage prior to planting winter annuals incorporates crabgrass seed and usually results in good crabgrass stands the following spring, without the need for spring tillage. When the crabgrass stand is established, fertilization is the primary management practice required. Crabgrass growth in Florida declines by late August or early September. More information about crabgrass can be found in EDIS:  Crabgrass as a Forage and Hay Crop

The season for summer plantings of annual grass forages is almost here. We can hope for timely rains and better growing conditions than this past year’s. Perhaps these summer annual forages might find a fit and help extend the forage calendar on your livestock operation.

Source:ufl.edu