CP-42...the hottest new CRP program?

UGUIDE

Active member
CP-42 Pollinator is now a continuous CRP program.

Why is this significant?

$150/acre SIP
90% cost share
10-15 year option
20% bonus on the rental rate
No acreage limitation
You can put it just about anywhere you have the cropping history 4 of 6 from 02-07.

And a dang good mix for wildlife:thumbsup:
 
My pheasants forever biologist and I put on a pollinator field day on my wildlife area July 6th. We had and Wichita State University prof of entomology there to discuss the insect side of the equation. We were about a month late on the peak of the wildflower bloom, but were still able to label and flag 50 species for interested participants to view. There were 34 participants that came and viewed the plants and asked many good questions about the program and how it fit into their farm plans. I am hoping to work this into a GPS harvest evaluation field day where we would show folks how they can take unproductive acres on their farm out of production and take a profitable payment on those acres to help their bottom line. It's a very good option.
 
Correct me if I am wrong but based on objective of this planting Rye would not show up in any of these designs even if requested by landowner.

Design is like 9 native wildflower species and to design those to have something blooming every month of the summer.
 
I believe that they divide summer into 3 sections and want 3 species blooming in each unit. I'd guess that no grasses are included in the mix, just flowering plants.
 
Just wondering cause the cp 39 mix had it in. Hope that they are seeing the light, and stop using it just for instant gratification and cheapness. The UDSA here is aware, and talk about it. But still do the wrong thing, plant it.:(
 
The seed grower I worked with that supplies much of the mid west. Does not use cover crops. Not on forbs, flowers, or any stand of pure native grass seed. They raise pert near every varity you can think of. Including the canada and other ryes. Those with the dangerous awns should simply be left out. I asked why, and his reply was it is cheap. And services can show a land owner quick cover. Too bad it has now been rendered useless to dog owners that don't want a dead dog. If land owners that wish to profit from pay hunting are smart, they will not allow it put down. The word is getting out and people will avoid those areas. There for hurting the bottom line. It is hurting some lic shooting preserves here now. The simple solution is to simply not use them in "Any" mix from here on out, Then deal with the fields that have them in it. It won't take too many more years before the public as a whole and the dog owners become aware. Then avoid it. They are the revenue generator. I drive by some of these new fields 200+ acres and see it mostly Canada rye. Sad deal. Then smile at the no tresspassing sign, thinking no worries mate, LOL. Many regions are running out of suitable fields for trials etc because of it. It's just no good.
 
My pheasants forever biologist and I put on a pollinator field day on my wildlife area July 6th. We had and Wichita State University prof of entomology there to discuss the insect side of the equation. We were about a month late on the peak of the wildflower bloom, but were still able to label and flag 50 species for interested participants to view. There were 34 participants that came and viewed the plants and asked many good questions about the program and how it fit into their farm plans. I am hoping to work this into a GPS harvest evaluation field day where we would show folks how they can take unproductive acres on their farm out of production and take a profitable payment on those acres to help their bottom line. It's a very good option.

Thank you.:)
 
I asked why, and his reply was it is cheap.

As I keep saying, so are oats. If a cover crop is desired, fine. Just use oats instead.

My in-laws neighbors have field trial GSP's they work with and breed. One of their champion dogs had a awn lodged in her lung. Had to go through surgery and all to remove it. Dog could have easily died from it.
 
We had our mixer remove the rye from their equation and sell us what we wanted as long as we met the requirements. Cost us a little more, but well worth it in my opinion.
 
Why have a nurse crop at all?

Warm seasons, wild flowers, etc do not need the cover/nurse crop. As you know, people like to see green, and, unlike a barren area of dirt with a few dandelions popping up here and there, the cover crop serves as cover and a food source.

Plus they keep clients/landowners from asking "why isn't anything coming up yet". Despite telling them it takes time, some don't seem to listen or just simply worry that they may have wasted a lot of time and $ due to the barren ground.:)

Cover/nurse crops aren't going away. This is why I keep pushing oats, oats, oats. They're cheap, fill in bare areas early on, look good, and serve wildlife.
 
Nurse crops are a good thing, as long as oats are used.:thumbsup:
Good bird feed, overhead canopy, won't re seed next season, thatch for next years nesters and brood rearing.
Why not? add some oats.:cheers:
 
I recently confirmed that the CP-42 does not offer the PIP which is 40% of cost share or the 20% bonus rental rate.

However, there are no acreage limitations and you can put it anywhere that has eligible cropping history. The $150 SIP ain't bad either.
 
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