Wade Dooley with his cover crop.
Four Observations
Observation 1: Rye can be planted all the way till spring of a following year, but don’t expect a good stand come corn and soybean planting time.
In mid-May, when Wade went to plant soybeans, he found – as he expected – that stands of cereal rye seeded at different dates resulted in differing spring performance. The rye drilled during the early fall of 2018 had the best stand, unsurprisingly, as indicated by the number of shoots (known as tillers) on the plants. The cover crop seeded closer to March had germinated but not tillered, which created a thin stand when the soybeans were planted.
Observation 2: Seeding cover crops past March 20, 2019 conditions did not allow for vernalization.
Wade wondered if the March planted rye would stay vegetative or produce flowers. Because rye needs exposure to prolonged cold weather to trigger flowering, a process called vernalization, most often any rye seeded after March 20 will fail to flower and will remain supple and grass-like. All rye planted before March 20, 2019 initiated flowering. The rye seeded March 20 rye did not.
Observation 3: If your goal is weed control plant in October or November. Don’t wait!
As for weed control, Wade found that the mid-fall seeding worked best – another result he anticipated. If you have high weed pressure plan to seed cover crops before ground freezes. If your fields have mid to low weed pressure, you can seed into February, but Wade does not recommend seeding into March.
Wade observed that the non-vernalized rye performed the worst at weed control. Wade also reported that all of the stands were easy to terminate with Roundup, which he did after no-till planting soybeans directly into the cover crop.
Observation 4: Keep your end goal in mind, and be willing to adjust practices
No matter when you seed cover crops, it is important to determine your goals for seeding cover crops. Your goals will guide what would be best practices, even if you seed cover crops late. If you are aiming for the best weed control in the spring, your seeding rates will need to be increased substantially if you seed the rye in the dormant timeframe. Wade recommends at least doubling the amount you normally seed if not triple the amount in order to obtain the best weed control.
If your goal is to improve the soil quality, then simply getting the seed in the ground is the most important factor to consider. With this in mind, drilling is going to work better than broadcasting with incorporation – which is going to work better than just broadcasting. But Wade quips: “Broadcasting the seed is still better than just leaving the seed in the shed.”
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