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- #21
soarwitheagles
True BYH Addict
So how did your harvest go? Your fava bean experiment certainly sounds interesting. What about planting a few favas directly in the pasture for the sheep to graze?
Hi again Baymule!
The fava bean experiment was a radical success. Thank you for asking. We did make a few mistakes, and we learned from them. Here is what we learned:
1. In our locale, for maximum harvest, all fava beans should be planted in early Oct. We planted from Oct-Dec last year and the Dec plantings did not come up due to super saturation and colder temps.
2. We mistakenly planted rows 3 ft. apart. This distance is usually only used if you are planting fava for seed harvest. Correctly spacing for forage production is one seed every 6 inches and rows every 12 inches. So this tells us next years harvest should be well over triple the size.
3. We did not have time to ferment the fava beans with the plants as planned. The good news is we simply fed the sheep either the fresh green plants and beans, or waited and fed them the dried plant and beans. The sheep loved both versions. The only thing I did not like about the dried version of feed...the sheep make a terribly loud noise as they chomp down on the dried seed and chew it up. It was really irritating...even from hundreds of feet away! And worst of all, they all eat with their mouths open, not closed...dang, ranchers have such a rough life!
4. Due to the high level of success and the incredibly low maintenance labor, we hope to plant several acres of fava beans now in the very near future [Oct. 1st].
Hope this helps!