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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Agronomy and Crop Sciences

Why Does Second-Cutting Red Clover Hay "Slobber" Animals, J. Kenneth Evans, A. S. Williams, D. E. Labore Sep 1970

Why Does Second-Cutting Red Clover Hay "Slobber" Animals, J. Kenneth Evans, A. S. Williams, D. E. Labore

Agronomy Notes

For years, farmers have noticed the slobbering of animals after feeding second-cutting red clover hay. Severity of this effect, however, has varied from year to year. Questions asked many times are what causes the slobbering and what can be done about it? To get the answers available, let's go back about 37 years into something which appears to be totally unrelated to slobbering and follow research which has been done on a fungus, which causes a disease of red clover.


Preliminary Report, 1969 And 1970 Kentucky Small Grain Yield Trials, Verne C. Finkner, Charles Tutt, Dennis M. Tekrony Aug 1970

Preliminary Report, 1969 And 1970 Kentucky Small Grain Yield Trials, Verne C. Finkner, Charles Tutt, Dennis M. Tekrony

Agronomy Notes

No abstract provided.


Yield And Value Of Burley 21 Tobacco As Influenced By Nitrogen Nutrition, Suckering Practice, And Harvest Date, J. L. Sims, W. O. Atkinson Jul 1970

Yield And Value Of Burley 21 Tobacco As Influenced By Nitrogen Nutrition, Suckering Practice, And Harvest Date, J. L. Sims, W. O. Atkinson

Agronomy Notes

An experiment was conducted in the field during 1966 on Maury silt loam soil to obtain information of the effects of agronomic factors on yield and value of Burley 21 tobacco . Ammonium nitrate fertilizer at varying rates, and concentrated super-phosphate and potassium sulfate at constant rates , were broadcast and disked in after plowing and before transplanting. All plots received irrigation water (sprinkler system) to supplement rainfall when soil moisture dropped below 60% of available moisture-holding capacity. Sucker control practices utilized were (a) no topping - no suckering, (b) topping - no suckering, (c) topping - hand suckering, and …


York Soybeans Added To Recommended List, Dennis B. Egli Apr 1970

York Soybeans Added To Recommended List, Dennis B. Egli

Agronomy Notes

York soybean, a pure line selection developed by the Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station from a cross of Dorman X Hood, was recently added to the recommended list for Kentucky. It was released jointly in 1967 by Virginia, Maryland, and North Carolina.


Preliminary Report Soybean Performance Tests 1970, Dennis B. Egli Jan 1970

Preliminary Report Soybean Performance Tests 1970, Dennis B. Egli

Agronomy Notes

The data presented below represent the preliminary results of the 1970 Soybean Performance Tests . A more complete version of the data, including data from previous years , will be published at a later date in "Results of the Kentucky Soybean Performance Tests - 1970."


Fertilizing No-Till Corn, John L. Ragland, John Masterson, C. R. Belcher Jan 1970

Fertilizing No-Till Corn, John L. Ragland, John Masterson, C. R. Belcher

Agronomy Notes

Results of an experiment conducted in 1968 at Princeton, Kentucky on low phosphate soil showed that surface-applied phosphorus was sufficiently available to no-till corn to produce good yields. This experiment was repeated again in the 1969 growing season with the results well in line with those reported for 1968 in Agronomy Research (Misc. 377) pages 41-43.


No-Tillage -- Suitability To Kentucky Soils, Robert L. Blevins Jan 1970

No-Tillage -- Suitability To Kentucky Soils, Robert L. Blevins

Agronomy Notes

As more farmers adopt no-tillage methods of farming the questions arises whether or not all soils are suited to this practice. To get an idea of how well suited the no-tillage method of corn production is to wide variety of soils, we made a survey in five different physiographic regions of Kentucky in 1969.