Farms.com Home   News

May a Key Time for Pastures as Grasses Make Warm-Season Transition

May a Key Time for Pastures as Grasses Make Warm-Season Transition

By Mary Hightower

Arkansas’ hay and forage producers will have to wait until the mud dries to perform some key actions to get their warm-season grasses going. 

“We recommend waiting to fertilize bermuda and other warm season grasses until the night temps are 60-plus degrees Fahrenheit for a week,” said John Jennings, professor and extension forage specialist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. “That is finally happening this week, but rain will keep farmers out of the fields. So as soon as fields conditions allow, fertilizer should be applied to those forages.” 


Jennings said growers should try to get their fescue and ryegrass out of the field “as soon as conditions allow to prevent quality losses from advancing maturity and, in mixed fields, to allow any underlying bermuda to receive sunshine to begin active growth.

“Prolonged delays of harvesting ryegrass can drastically stunt and delay bermuda growth well into summer due to excessive shading,” he said.

May is also a time for producers to get bermuda or crabgrass in the ground for summer forage.

“Fields should be prepped by getting the sod under control and to make certain there is no existing common bermudagrass,” he said. “Any existing bermuda will overtake any new bermuda variety that is planted which will make the upgrade to a better variety pointless.”

Download the fact sheets “Crabgrass for Forage,” https://www.uaex.edu/publications/pdf/FSA-3138.pdf and “Establishing Bermudagrass for Forage,” https://www.uaex.uada.edu/publications/pdf/FSA-19.pdf

 

Source : uada.edu

Trending Video

2026 T.K. Cheung Lecture in Animal Science - Dan Weary

Video: 2026 T.K. Cheung Lecture in Animal Science - Dan Weary

T.K. Cheung Lecture in Animal Science: "Using science to assess and improve the welfare of dairy cattle"

Dan Weary is a Professor at the University of British Columbia. Dan did his BSc and MSc at McGill and Doctorate at Oxford before co-founding UBC’s Animal Welfare Program where he now co-directs this active research group. His research focuses on understanding the perspectives of animals and applying these insights to develop methods of assessing animal welfare and improving the lives of animals. His work has helped drive changes in practices (including the adoption of higher milk rations for calves and pain management for disbudding) and housing methods (including the adoption of social housing for pre-weaned calves). He also studies cow comfort and lameness, social interactions among cows, and interactions between cows, human handlers and technologies like automated millking systems that are increasingly used on farms. His presentation will outline key questions in cattle welfare, highlight recent UBC research addressing them, and showcase innovative methods for improving the lives of cattle and their caretakers.