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Started by Struttntom, March 01, 2020, 11:07:27 AM
Quote from: bbcoach on March 07, 2020, 07:00:58 PMStruttn, here's my 2 cents on starting and establishing a clover plot. IMO a clover plot should be started in the fall with a cover crop of winter wheat or winter rye. Here is why: 1. clover is a cool weather crop and will grow better in the fall and spring 2. clover doesn't compete well with weeds 3. most clovers do better when established with good moisture not summer drought 4. if you haven't done a soil test and need lime you are setting yourself up for a BIG failure this spring. I have had Excellent success with Durana clover. This clover is a intermediate white clover that will grow to 15-18 inches with good moisture, fertilization and PH at 6.5 and deer and turkeys love it. PH is a BIG factor when it comes to a plot failure. Your PH needs to be around 6.5 with a high concentration of P and K in the soil (this is why a soil test is a MUST). If you plant clover in the spring, drought, weeds and poor soil will almost assure you of failure. My recommendation is get a soil sample right now, apply the lime ASAP, spray the plot with glyphosate in May and again right before you plant around the 1st of September. Disc the plot, cultipack or run ATV tires over the plot to pack the soil down firmly, sow the seed and cultipack pack down again and pray for some soaking rainfall. DO NOT drag or disc the seed in. Clover seed is VERY, VERY small and only needs to be in contact with the soil to germinate and grow. Check out Durana clover on the net and see what you think. It should grow well in Arkansas. Good Luck! PM me if you have any further questions.