Reading the Stand
With spring around the corner, everything is about to start growing again and alfalfa will soon come out of dormancy. Leta Larsen, Alfalfa and Forage Specialist with Croplan Alfalfa shares what we need to know about early season alfalfa.
“The first thing we always focus on is reading the stand,” started Leta. “That’s evaluating how things came out of winter and if there was any damage done.”
To read the stand, you need to start by doing a stand count. To complete this, you throw a square foot hoop or alfalfa circle, out into the field and count how many plants are in each square foot. For high yielding alfalfa you will want to have above 55 stems per sq/ft. When you find below 39 stems/sq/ft it is recommended that you rotate out of alfalfa, usually to corn to use the nitrogen credits created from your alfalfa crop.
In addition to counting stems, its important to dig 5-10 plants across the field, then score the crowns and score the roots. When the roots are cut open, they should look white and healthy rather than gray and water soaked. A score of 0-2 is a good healthy root indicating the crop will make it another year. A score of 3-5 scores is a sign to rotate out.
If its a new seeding you can go in and replant some patches but if the stand has been out for longer than a year, its recommended to rotate out because auto-toxicity would prohibit that new seeding to grow.
Considering seeding a new alfalfa field this year? Timing is important but there is not really a poor time to seed alfalfa, you just don’t want to seed too late. Ideally, the middle of August should be the latest in Michigan. The main issue with stand failure is poor seed bed preparation, so make sure to properly and firmly prepare the seed bed. Alfalfa seed should be planted at 3/8 inch.
To learn more about reading the stand and seed bed preparation tune into our full conversation at Field Points. Next week, we will be diving into seedling diseases in alfalfa and how traits and genetics are impacting yield and quality.