Unless You Test, It's Just a Guess: How to Take, Interpret, and Utilize a  Forage Sample

Unless You Test, It's Just a Guess: How to Take, Interpret, and Utilize a Forage Sample

4.7
(703)
Write Review
More
$ 7.50
Add to Cart
In stock
Description

Measuring, monitoring, and managing forage requires producers to regularly measure how much forage mass is present and how quickly that forage is growing. By using a rising plate meter, producers can assess the forage mass across several pastures quickly and with reasonable accuracy. Then, by comparing available forage in individual paddocks from one week to another, producers can determine the growth rate of the forage. In periods of poor growing conditions, management can be deployed to increase growth rates. In periods of rapid growth rate, decisions can be made to alter grazing sequences or plans can be made to harvest excess forage for hay or baleage. In short, the rising plate meter helps producers to assess the current status of each pasture and then make better decisions to increase the efficient use of that forage.

Soil Health Coffee Convo: Grazing Cover Crops

Mad Honey” Shows How the Secrets We Keep Can Haunt Us

Browse UGA Cooperative Extension

Browse UGA Cooperative Extension

I'm a Senior Recruiter at EA. Here's What I Look For - Forage

Baleage: Frequently Asked Questions

The Letters of Bernard Berenson and Isabella Stewart Gardner (Part

Georgia Forages: Grass Species

White Clover Establishment and Management Guide

Rumen health seminar: Regular forage analysis pays

Soil and Fertilizer Management Considerations for Forage Systems

Montana Ag Live, 5910: Forage Production Improvements

10 penny-pinching tips for feeding cows this winter

Quality is key for high-forage dairy diets