• Email List Signup
  • Catalog
1-717-687-6224
[email protected]
  • Find Products
    • Perennial Forages
      • Grasses
      • Alfalfa and Clover
      • Perennial Mixtures
      • Perennial Forbs
    • Cover Crops
    • Cool Season Annuals
    • Summer Annuals
      • Forage Sorghum, Sorghum Sudan, and Sudangrass
      • Grain Sorghum
      • Mixtures, Teff, Millet, Brassicas
      • Sunflowers, Sunn Hemp, Buckwheat & More
      • Soybeans
    • Corn
    • Organic Seed – Forage, Cover Crop, and Grain
    • Industrial Hemp
    • Wildlife Food Plots
    • Turf Type Products
    • Forage Inoculant Products
    • Biologicals & Seed Stimulants
    • Seed Treatment And Coating Information
    • John Deere Financial
  • Find Your Dealer
  • Resources
    • King’s Agriseed Blog
    • Farm Planning Tools and Calculators
    • Forage Technical Reference Encyclopedia
    • Season Product Guides / Newsletters
    • Organic Certification
    • Product Literature
    • Recommended Reading & Presentations
    • Steps to Success
    • Supported Organizations
    • Winter Meeting Video Recordings
  • Dealer Portal
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Who We Are
    • Become a Dealer
    • Press Room
  • Staff Directory
We moved! We are now located at 1828 Freedom Rd, Suite 101, Lancaster PA. We look forward to continuing to serve you!

Frost-seeding? Consider your Clover Options

5 years ago

By Joy Beam, King’s AgriSeeds

Consider using the cold mornings in February as an opportunity to frost-seed your pastures with clover for more productive forages this upcoming spring!  Besides fixing 40-120 pounds of N/A/Year, these legumes increase animal performance while improving the palatability of forages. This leads to an increased amount and quality of forage consumed.  In beef cattle, pastures with clover produce significantly more pounds of beef per acre than those without, and the same translates to milk yields in grazing dairy herds.

What type of clover fits your operation best? There are multiple varieties of red or white clover to choose from for perennial pastures. Red clover is one of the fastest establishing legumes, tolerates more acidic soil, and can be similar to alfalfa in quality and yield when on the same harvest schedule.  Red clover may be less winter hardy than other clovers and is generally best for grazing or silage, but improved varieties such as Freedom!MR red clover can also be used for dry hay and has better winter hardiness.

White clovers can be subdivided into three categories: short, intermediate, and large or ladino.  Short white clover is less productive and not commonly seeded into pastures.  Intermediate white clover spreads prolifically by stolons while being tolerant to traffic and grazing.  It is a high-quality forage that will not lignify in hot weather like alfalfa, red clover, or grasses. It also tends to be more persistent than red clover. However, it is a shorter clover that may be lower yielding than red or ladino clovers.  Use varieties such as Alsike for cool, moist, acidic soils, or Alice for vigorous spring and summer growth.

Large white clovers, commonly referred to as ladino, are the largest of the white clovers, growing 2-4 times the size of common white clovers. Their strength lies in their aggressive growth habits that outcompete weeds, and they have larger leaves and higher yields than intermediate white clovers.  However, they are less tolerant of grazing and traffic than intermediate white clovers.  Each clover has its positives and negatives- choose the one that works the best with the goals of your business, or if you like the best of all three worlds, take a look at King’s Premium Clover Mix.

Speak to an expert at King’s AgriSeeds now at 1-717-687-6224 or email us at [email protected].

 

Previous Post
CBD HEMP – Is this crop for you?
Next Post
Oat / Field Pea Mix – A Multi Faceted Simple Yet Diverse Mix!

Related Posts

No results found.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

Recent Posts

  • Why Treated Seeds Might Increase Slug Damage and Harm Beneficials
  • King’s AgriSeeds Host Meetings in Four States
  • Phytonutrient Advantage: Building Better Beef
  • Spring Drought Forage Recommendations
  • The Power of Clover in Beef Pastures

Recent Comments

  • Taylor on Regulating the Sugar Intake of Horses on Pasture
  • Paul Diffee on A Pasture Pick-Me-Up for Summer
  • Jennifer Kress on Regulating the Sugar Intake of Horses on Pasture
  • Joe stuckel on Forage Sorghum: Boot Stage Harvest
  • Joe on Horses: A List of Concerns

Blogroll

  • Beef Producer Blog
  • Bill’s Forage Files
  • Dairy Grazing
  • Grass-Based Health
  • Hougar Farms Blog
  • On Pasture
  • Progressive Cattleman
  • Progressive Dairy

Archives

KING’S AGRISEEDS

1828 Freedom Rd, Suite 101
Lancaster, PA 17601
T: (717) 687-6224
F: (717) 824-3731
[email protected]

We offer a vast product line of improved varieties and hybrids.

We service the Middle Atlantic and Northeastern regions of the United States by providing a full line of forage seed, livestock focused corn hybrids and cover crop seed.

Facebook
X
YouTube

Privacy Policy

© King's Agriseeds

 

You are now browsing King’s AgriSeeds. Back to SoutheastAgriSeeds.com

 

×