[AT] OT Hay question
Dean Vinson
dean.vinson at vinsonfarm.com
Tue Jul 11 05:21:07 PDT 2006
Thanks for the great explanation!
Dean Vinson
www.vinsonfarm.com
Dayton OH
----- Original Message -----
From: "toma" <toma at risingnet.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Monday, July 10, 2006 4:36 PM
Subject: Re: [AT] OT Hay question
> Where I am here on the central coast of California is Oat country. Oats
> was grown here primarily for seed. Alfalfa won't grow here near the coast
> so most planted hay is cut from Oats, sometimes Oats and Vetch. For some
> reason Wheat has never been grown here commercially although I grew some
> back in the '90's and it did well.
>
> When cut for hay Oats is cut in the milk stage. After it heads out and
> when the grain is squeezed between the fingers and a little milk squirts
> out. One family here used to cut it in the dough stage, by then the stalks
> have tuned a golden color. When cut in the milk stage the stalks are still
> green with a little red.
>
> There seems to be quite a bit of latitude in when to cut. Ours was in the
> milk for a while before we cut it. I was afraid it might rain so we held
> off for a while. I planted it on a cousins place and they were happy to
> have us plant it just to keep the brush down. They are great hunters so we
> left a corner behind for rent. Deer love oats and they may get some bucks
> out of there. The oats I left behind is still in the milk and it is 2
> weeks since we cut. As I said it is cool climate here, that is probably
> why oats does so well here, it has a long time to fill.
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