Weather curveballs were thrown this year in the Midwest as farmers experienced a very wet spring. Mother Nature’s torrential rains made making first crop alfalfa cutting a challenge. “Forage was rocket fuel before the rain, and beef quality when it finally stopped,” said Scott Newell, a University of Wisconsin-Madison extension alfalfa specialist, in a Badger Crop Connect webinar. Although the weather was uncontrollable, Newell gave tips on how alfalfa stands can be controlled through persistence management.

Maintaining persistence with alfalfa means keeping the stand as productive as possible for as long as the stand is in the ground. The alfalfa management triangle focuses on three main parts: quality, yield and persistence. Managing for yield also means that the farmer is managing for persistence. But if managing for quality, expect a bit of yield loss. “Management is always a trade-off, so we do still need high-quality forage to feed into the ration. But we need to have some times of the year where we balance that management for quality with some management for persistence as well,” noted Newell. Higher nutrient levels can also be achieved from alfalfa if the stand is strong.

How do you achieve persistence? Factors such as variety choice, soil type, drainage, pH, nutrient status, winter stubble, snow cover, and winter conditions all play a role in persistence. Cutting management allows for winter acclimation of the plant, restoration of root reserves in the crown and taproot, and accumulation of different compounds for winter projection, plus it can affect spring vigor and can provide regrowth to block wind and catch snow. Be sure to avoid cutting five to six weeks prior to killing frost.

It is important to note that alfalfa does not have the same growth rate throughout the entire season. First and second cuttings generate the most yield but also vary in quality. “As we get to third and fourth cuttings, we’re not necessarily losing the quality like we would from first and second cutting by leaving the cutting interval longer,” noted the extension specialist. Consider this while making third and fourth cuttings. “If on a 28-day schedule, you might be forfeiting yield at an appropriate quality if you would have left it in the field a little longer,” he said.

With a strong alfalfa stand, greater nutrition can be achieved. Gain persistence in your stand to maintain profitability for the following year.


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(c) Hoard's Dairyman Intel 2024
September 5, 2024
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