A fast growing, highly palatable hybrid. It is widely adaptable and dependable to
produce good quality forage in varying conditions. Well suited for greenchop or haylage,
excellent cover crop. Sweething produces a sweet, leafy, fine stemmed plant for high
value feed.
Hybrid Sorghum - SudangrassBrown MidRib Hybrid Sorghum-Sudangrass for Grazing, Hay, and Silage.
This multipurpose hybrid offers tremendous flexibility to producers.
When used as a direct pasture forage, BMR Sweething is exceptionally palatable and livestock tend to utilize more of the entire plant. Quality and production of regrowth are adequate for both rotational grazing and hay production. This hybrid also produces an excellent yielding silage crop with a high grain-to-stover ratio.
BMR Sweetthing adds an exciting new concept and form to sorghum-sudangrass forage hybrid. Because of the BMR trait, improved quality of the forage is attained with direct results of significant increases in animal gain. This hybrid has demonstrated the ability to increase both meat and milk production dramatically, resulting in a greater profit per acre of pasture.
BMR Brown Mid-Rib Sweething Hybrid Sorghum Sudangrass has exceptional palatability and significant reductions of Lignin content in the plant do to the BMR gene. Lignin is the component of the plant cell walls that is the primary limiting factor in the digestion of forage fiber. With the reduction of Lignin the digestibility of the plant increases dramatically. With the increased digestibility comes increased efficiency and therefore increased profitability. Add to this higher palatability and BMR Sweething Hybrid Sorghum Sudangrass is the product of choice in sorghum sudangrass.
This hybrid BMR sorghum-sudangrass has slightly larger and wider leaves than most conventional sorghum-sudangrass varieties. It also has significant brown-midrib expression, medium stem size, and white tannin-free seeds.
GEM-X is a high yielding pearl millet hybrid recommended for greenchop, grazing, or hay. GEM-X has a massive root system that enables it to stand up to heat and drought, particularly on light soils. It shows good tolerance to leaf and stem diseases, produces well on low pH soils with low fertility. GEM-X has no prussic acid and is recommended for both horses and cattle.
Popular for annual hay and late summer pasture. This annual forage is low in prussic acid content and has good drought and disease tolerance. Piper is a Wisconsin release that has good regrowth after pasturing and is the leading sudangrass hybrid.
Siberian Foxtail Millet is the most commonly grown hay millet in the upper Midwest. Siberian is an early maturing hay millet, ready for harvesting 55-65 days after planting. Siberian is extremely hardy and drought tolerant, making excellent quality hay.
German Foxtail Millet is a longer season type than Siberian, being ready to harvest 65-70 days after planting. German Millet is taller with a coarser stem than Siberian. German Millet can produce more forage than Siberian and because of its increased stem size takes better management than other foxtail millets..
A Full Season Brown Midrib Forage Sorghum for Pasture, Silage or Hay
This is the cattleman’s newest premier hybrid. Its exceptional sweetness and the fact that it is brown midrib makes BMR Sweetie a cut above the rest.
BMR Sweetie has larger stems than sorghum sudangrass hybrids, resulting in excellent resistance to lodging. It also retains its large dark green leaves throughout the growing season.
BMR Sweetie is partially sterile, thereby not producing significant amounts of grain. This causes a substantial build-up of non-structural carbohydrates (sugars) in the stem and leaves. Consequently, the entire plant is more palatable to cattle than many conventional hybrids.
Whether used as summer pasture, hay or left for a winter graze-out program, this BMR hybrid will provide significant increases in animal gain over conventional forage sorghums.
Forage TurnipTurnip is a fast growing crop that reaches near maximum production 80 to 90 days after seeding. Turnip germinates quickly, and can be planted to provide summer, fall and winter grazing. Turnip can be green chopped but most often is grazed with roots, stems and leaves all being grazed. Turnip has been planted into irrigated corn in late July for grazing after combining. Turnip does best on well- drained soils with pH levels between 5.3 and 6.8. Plant shallow ¼ to ½ inch deep at a seeding rate of two pounds per acre.
Annual warm season legume. Has the ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen through root nodules. Fares better on marginal, drier soils. Shade tolerant which makes it an ideal companion in cover crop mixes.
Low growing viny legume with extremely good nitrogen fixing capablilities. Can survive winters if seeded with plenty of ground cover and has sufficient snow cover.
Annual plant with deep penetrating tap root for breaking soil compaction.
Member of cabbage/brassica family. Has excellent heat/cold tolerance and provides excellent forage qualities, especially during summer stress.
Member of the cabbage/brassica family. Provides excellent forage, especially late in the fall as it becomes sweeter after frost.
Large seeded annual nitrogen fixing legume, commonly planted in this area.
Cool season annual legume primarily used for forage production and mixed with other species.
Low growing nitrogen fixing annual legume used to improve soil quality.
Low growing nitrogen fixing legume used to improve soil quality, especially on marginal soils. Mildly winter hardy and may survive less severe winters given sufficient ground cover.
Member of the brassica/rapeseed family. Commonly grown for grain in this area and bred to have low acid oil content.
Drought tolerant annual legume. Can be used for livestock feed due to their high protein content and low digestive inhibitors. Will provide some nitrogen fixation and provides excellent green manure crop.
A cross between wheat and rye. Produces excellent forage, especially on marginal soils with nitrogen present.
RadishAnnual forage plant with root system extending 12-18” deep. Used to break soil compaction. Roots will store nitrogen and make it available in the spring.