—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. July 29. 1972 32 HIRE ARE A FEW EMERGENCY AGWAY'S 1 Sorghum-Sudan - Green chop at 30-40 inches into silo, or cut, double crush, and make into hay. Tricky, but I’ve seen some excellent hay made this way. 2. Cut and bale excessive pasture for young stock, dry’s, and heifers. Not the best - but it fills. 3. Plant oats around August 10-15 and cut for silage or hay. Could give up to 2 Vz tons of dry matter per acre. 4. Fertilize pastures well. With more ram, a good fall pasture will greatly cut down on barn hay use. 5. After gram corn harvested, chop remaining corn stalks. Can make good feed for young and dry stock. 6. Plan on lightly pasturing fall grains - plant Hessian fly resistant wheat or barley a little early with some extra nitrogen. 7. Hard to do - but not too late to plant soybeans for hay. Thirty years ago this was widely done. Cut at dough stage and double crush. G & G FEED & SUPPLY SALUNGA STORE M. M. GOOD & SON MRS. JACOB L. KURTZ WILLOW STREET STORE QOARRYVILLE STORE 898-2248 Gordonville Elizabethtown 464-3521 786-2126 768-3781 367-5430 WAS YOUR HAY CROP LOST TO AGNES? HAY CROP TIPS MAKE HAY WITH AG WAY Manheim 665-5001 CROPSPECIALIST. HENRY B. HOOVER, INC. Ephrata 733-6593 ■i I M \ --^1 FROM LANCASTER STORE 394-0541 NICK FERRANT, JR. NEW HOLLAND STORE 354-2146
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