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  1. M

    Lost my private ground

    Huh, don’t know what to say. Maybe I’m taking it wrong.
  2. M

    Emergency haying.

    Maybe he means next year. You know, after they were baled. Locally years ago the DNR paid my grandad to go out on the ice and cut the cattails. We have old aerial photos showing the pattern he cut. Don’t know why they did it, only did it once, on a small lake. Another year the DNR had farmers...
  3. M

    Emergency haying.

    Counties in NW Iowa are in the green area and our contracts are not eligible for haying and grazing. It depends a lot on the program it’s in. I know of none in Clay county that have been allowed to hay. The DNR and county conservation land has had some haying and grazing done however.
  4. M

    Alfalfa growing questions

    My suggestions on the various species was intended to address the eventual problem of keeping weeds out. If you are going with Rup alfalfa then that will not be a consideration. Stand life should not be a problem, I have alfalfa in some CRP that is at least 15 years old, it probably has...
  5. M

    Alfalfa growing questions

    I might think about a mix of alfalfa and red/white clover. The alfalfa would be something like Matrix and Ladino for the white clover. Some type of bunch grass would work in with it also. Lots of good food for birds in that mix, bugs also. It doesn’t take well to burning if you ever do that...
  6. M

    Pup going to training for a month

    I count losses towards my daily limit. Makes me feel a better about them. I’ve maybe lost one a year the last few years. I don’t hunt as much as many do of course. I also don’t take shots some folks would, just me.
  7. M

    Steel Shot

    The flat out straight away shots on pheasants is where steel falls flat, lots of stuff to get through before a vital is hit. That’s a pretty common pheasant shot, not so much on waterfowl from what little hunting I do.
  8. M

    A5 sweet 16..... the A5

    The Japanese Auto five isn’t a copy is it ?
  9. M

    Hay question

    Grass hay, oat hay, wheat hay, alfalfa hay, alfalfa/grass hay, brome hay, mixed hay..you get the idea.
  10. M

    Steel Shot

    Steel shot has limitations, 15 lost is unacceptable.
  11. M

    Roadside Survey

    Here in NW Iowa I think their survey is pretty much in line with what I’ve seen.
  12. M

    Does Your Lawn Have Weeds...

    I’ve never thought about that, it is a good point. As a landowner I would look askance at dog with a bunch of weeds in its fur coming to hunt.
  13. M

    Does Your Lawn Have Weeds...

    Let me check my list of things to worry about….. Nope, not on there.
  14. M

    CRP May Be Hayed or Grazed

    Many CRP contracts don’t qualify for haying this year, and have in the past. The rules on what can be taken for hay has changed. We took hay off about a third last year, none qualified this year. We are in a severe drought area. Some folks forget about the “Reserve“ in CRP, it isn’t a...
  15. M

    CRP May Be Hayed or Grazed

    In Iowa the IHAP program allows all normal farming operations on the land. In the past I have raised crops, grazed and hayed land in the program. The program simply gives you the opportunity to be on the land, not what you will find when you get there. Other states are no doubt different.
  16. M

    CRP May Be Hayed or Grazed

    The penalties for being out of compliance are pretty severe, not worth the risk. It would take some amount of manpower to check every contract, they are spot checked however. You are welcome to roll the dice on the license.
  17. M

    A morning that makes it worth doing.

    My grandad always said two weeks can be the difference between a hero and a heal.
  18. M

    Birds here for the unselfish.

    Several years I have limited myself to one a day.
  19. M

    Took the combine to town.

    When I was young ditches and fence rows were the primary hunting spots, no CRP and little state owned land.
  20. M

    Took the combine to town.

    I took the combine to Spencer in NW Iowa early this morning. I saw many, many broods of pheasants out on the back roads, more than I have ever seen. Most were evidently hatched in the ditches since there was only corn and beans for some distance. Every thing to roosters with some color to some...
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