Raising the pH is the first priority. All that requires is ground limestone and time. I called my local lime company (Root Lime) and had them bring a spreader truck with 15 tons of lime to spread on 10 acres of the farm. The lime will react chemically with the soil over the next year to bring the pH up to around 6.5.
I decided that Cowpeas would be the best choice for my first round of cover crops. They grow very well in Oklahoma in all kinds of weather conditions, they establish quickly, and compete well with weeds. Most importantly, they are legumes and will fix nitrogen into the soil for the next crop. They are a very beneficial cover crop. I wasn't sure if I would be able to find the seed in significant quantity but the mill in Stillwater fortunately had them in 50# sacks and they weren't too expensive either. I had some old wheat seed around and mixed that in too. Hopefully it will come up and not try to set seed before the cowpeas are ready.
-Don
Welcome back to the blogosphere.
ReplyDeleteThanks Stephen, I haven't heard the term blogosphere a long time. Good to be back.
ReplyDeleteYay Bootstrap farm blog is back! :)
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you're back Don. I'm so sorry about your soul. I know this has been a very hard winter. It was cold, wet, rainy and depressing as hell. Hang in there. Your information about cover cropping and soil amendments is spot on BTW.~~Dee
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