The Old Ram-Australia
Herd Master
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2011
- Messages
- 986
- Reaction score
- 2,125
- Points
- 303
IS NATURE IN CONTROL..........,I was prompted to think about this question while walking back from checking on some groups of ewe's being mated.
It appears that all of our land that has previously cultivated is showing a "huge" increase of White Clover this Autumn/winter season.This year is the second year in a row of "good" season pasture growth after 10 dry years(the largest for over 100 years).During the dry periods we saw NO Clover for years on end,so it comes as a surprise to me at its sudden revival.......
Because much of our pasture is based on Native sp and "compaction" is their greatest enemy, vehicle traffic is, except on "rare" occasions kept to defined tracks.The non use of any artificial fertilizers means that the pasture has returned to its "natural cycle" of production and although we do use herbasides to "spot spray" difficult weeds(Serrated Tussock and Thistle sp) the Soil Microbiology seems capable of coping with it without damage(I took a pic of field mushrooms growing out of a dead Serrated Tussock which had been sprayed a month or so before).
So the question is ,is it possible that the system has signaled the dormant Clover to re-emerge, so that the pasture has sufficient N to cope with its existing needs and its possible increased need into the future?
It appears that all of our land that has previously cultivated is showing a "huge" increase of White Clover this Autumn/winter season.This year is the second year in a row of "good" season pasture growth after 10 dry years(the largest for over 100 years).During the dry periods we saw NO Clover for years on end,so it comes as a surprise to me at its sudden revival.......
Because much of our pasture is based on Native sp and "compaction" is their greatest enemy, vehicle traffic is, except on "rare" occasions kept to defined tracks.The non use of any artificial fertilizers means that the pasture has returned to its "natural cycle" of production and although we do use herbasides to "spot spray" difficult weeds(Serrated Tussock and Thistle sp) the Soil Microbiology seems capable of coping with it without damage(I took a pic of field mushrooms growing out of a dead Serrated Tussock which had been sprayed a month or so before).
So the question is ,is it possible that the system has signaled the dormant Clover to re-emerge, so that the pasture has sufficient N to cope with its existing needs and its possible increased need into the future?