Trophy Rape Seed For Deer Food Plots - Brassicas

Trophy Rape Seed

1 LB
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7.99
5 LBS
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14.99
10 LBS
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24.99
50 LBS
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79.99

LATIN NAME

Brassica napus

SEASON

Annual

WHEN TO PLANT

Late summer to early fall

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Moderate

CROP HEIGHT

20 inches

COLD TOLERANCE

Excellent

HEAT TOLERANCE

Moderate

SHADE TOLERANCE

Good

DAYS TO MATURITY

90 - 120 days

PLANT CHARACTERISTICS

Fast growing, deer magnet, soil fertility

LATIN NAME

Fagopyrum esculentum

SEASON

Annual

WHEN TO PLANT

Late spring to mid summer

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Moderate

CROP HEIGHT

36 - 48 inches

COLD TOLERANCE

Excellent

HEAT TOLERANCE

Good

SHADE TOLERANCE

Poor

DAYS TO MATURITY

70 - 90 days

PLANT CHARACTERISTICS

Wear tolerant, fast growing, improves soil, nutritious grain

LATIN NAME

Vigna unguiculata

SEASON

Annual

WHEN TO PLANT

After danger of frost

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Moderate - high

CROP HEIGHT

24 - 36 inches

COLD TOLERANCE

Poor

HEAT TOLERANCE

Excellent

SHADE TOLERANCE

Moderate

DAYS TO MATURITY

80 - 90 days

PLANT CHARACTERISTICS

Fast growing, high protein

LATIN NAME

Panicum miliaceum

SEASON

Annual

HEIGHT

36 - 72 inches

WHEN TO PLANT

Late spring to early summer

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Low

COLD TOLERANCE

Low

HEAT TOLERANCE

High

SHADE TOLERANCE

Low

DAYS TO MATURITY

60 - 90 days

IDEAL FOR

Birds, livestock, wildlife, cover crop

LATIN NAME

Lens culinaris

SEASON

Annual

HEIGHT

12 - 24 inches

WHEN TO PLANT

Early spring

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Medium

COLD TOLERANCE

Good

HEAT TOLERANCE

Poor

SHADE TOLERANCE

Poor

DAYS TO MATURITY

80 - 110 days

IDEAL FOR

Cover crop, food source

LATIN NAME

Linum usitatissimum

SEASON

Annual

HEIGHT

24 - 36 inches

WHEN TO PLANT

Early Spring

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Little

COLD TOLERANCE

Poor

HEAT TOLERANCE

Poor

SHADE TOLERANCE

Poor

DAYS TO MATURITY

90 - 120 days

IDEAL FOR

Linen fiber, edible seed, oil, cover crop

LATIN NAME

Camelina sativa

SEASON

Annual

HEIGHT

12 - 48 inches

WHEN TO PLANT

Spring

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Low

COLD TOLERANCE

Good

HEAT TOLERANCE

High

SHADE TOLERANCE

Good

DAYS TO MATURITY

85 - 100 days

IDEAL FOR

Edible oil, biodiesel, covercrop

LATIN NAME

Vicia sativa

SEASON

Annual

HEIGHT

24 - 48 inches

WHEN TO PLANT

Depends on location

MOISTURE REQUIREMENTS

Moderate

COLD TOLERANCE

Moderate

HEAT TOLERANCE

Moderate

SHADE TOLERANCE

Good

DAYS TO MATURITY

70 - 125 days

IDEAL FOR

Cover crop, green manure, hay, silage, forage

About...

Trophy Rape - One of the most versatile of the brassicas, being suitable for a wide range of soil fertility, cover cropping and environmental conditions, stock classes and sowing times.  Great for deer food plots too!
Buckwheat Seed Soil Improvement
Summer Soil Improver
Ideal for use as a summer soil improver, buckwheat seeds cover crop act as a green manure, enhancing soil health. This versatile cover crop is suitable for almost any soil type. It helps build a robust soil foundation with essential nutrients. While it buckwheat is unlikely to be your main crop, it can be a worthwhile part of your overall farm plan.
Buckwheat Flower Pollinator
Attracts Pollinators
Attracting pollinators is a standout benefit of using buckwheat cover crop seeds. The flowers bloom quickly, providing a crucial food source for bees and other beneficial insects. By planting buckwheat seeds, along with other seeds for planting, you create a pollinator-friendly environment that enhances biodiversity and boosts crop yields on your farm.
Buckwheat High Germination Rapid Growth
Quick Cover Crop
Known for its rapid growth, buckwheat serves as an excellent quick cover crop. Planting buckwheat seeds, along with hairy vetch cover crop seeds and miniclover seeds, ensures swift germination and maturity within 70-90 days. This fast-growing crop effectively covers bare soil, preventing erosion and suppressing unwante plants, making it ideal for any farm looking to improve soil health quickly.
Buckwheat Nutritious Grain Food Source
Nutritious Grain
Producing a nutritious grain, buckwheat seeds remain on the stalk after ripening, offering a prolonged food source. This dual-purpose crop enhances soil health while providing valuable grain. Incorporating buckwheat flour, buckwheat groats, and related products into your farming system can be highly beneficial.

MORE COVER CROP OPTIONS

Trophy rape seed Buckwheat Cowpeas seed Proso millet seeds Lentils seeds - spring Common flax seeds Camelina seeds Common vetch seeds ...More
ABOUT
VIDEOS

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

60F - 70F

SEEDING RATE

8 - 10 lbs per acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

3 - 10 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1/4 inch

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun

USDA ZONES

5 - 9

ESTABLISHMENT RATE

Fast

Field of Brassica Plants in Bloom
Brassica Trophy Brassica Bulk Seed Bags For Sale
Heat, Cold, Drought and Pest Resistant Brassica
Heat, Cold, Drought and Pest Resistant
Our Brassica Trophy Rapeseeds are designed to thrive under challenging conditions, including heat, cold, and drought, ensuring robust growth and high nutritional value for deer food plots. These versatile seeds improve soil structure and fertility, making them an ideal for brassica food plot seed or as deer plot mix.
Field of Brassica For Livestock Grazing
Livestock Grazing
Our Brassica Trophy Forage RapeSeed is ideal for livestock grazing, providing nutritious forage that supports healthy weight gain and overall livestock health. These seeds thrive in diverse conditions, ensuring a reliable food source year-round. They improve soil structure and fertility, making them suitable for brassica food plot seeds, deer plot seed mixes, and goat pasture seed mixes
Brassica Field Attracting Pollinators
Attracts Pollinators
Our rapeseeds are excellent for attracting pollinators like bees and butterflies, essential for a thriving ecosystem. Our brassica food plot seed flourishes in various conditions, ensuring abundant blooms that support pollinator health. They enhance biodiversity and improve crop yields. Perfect for cover crops and forage, they contribute to efficient farming practices.
Brassica for USDA Zones 5 - 9
USDA Zones 5-9
Our Brassica Trophy Forage Rapeseeds are ideally suited for USDA Zones 5-9, making them versatile for various climates. These no-till seeds excel in both warm and cool conditions, providing reliable ground cover and nutritious forage throughout the year. Whether you're planting in spring or fall, our seeds ensure robust growth and adaptability, supporting efficient farming practices and a healthy ecosystem.
Brassica Seed Oil Bottle
Our forage brassica seeds produce oil known as Canola Oil, prized for its versatility and multiple uses. In culinary applications, it's perfect for cooking and baking due to its light flavor and high smoke point. Industrially, it serves in the production of biodiesel and lubricants. In cosmetics, it's a key ingredient for skincare and haircare products due to its moisturizing properties. Known for its nutritional profile, Canola Oil is rich in omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids. Suitable for summer and fall food plot seeds, they thrive in diverse conditions, ensuring a reliable crop for various applications.
Field of Brassica Deer Greens For Attracting Deer
Rapeseed, known for its appeal to deer, becomes even more attractive after a frost as the sugar content becomes more concentrated. This makes it an excellent choice for deer food plots and food plot mixes. Ideal for brassica food plot seed, deer plot seed mixes, and no-till food plots, rapeseed enhances soil fertility and provides a nutritious forage option. It's perfect for summer and fall food plot seeds, supporting a thriving and healthy deer population.
Planting Directions For Brassica Seed
Our Brassica Trophy Forage RapeSeed thrives as a cool-season annual, flourishing in various conditions. With a seeding rate of 8-10 lbs per acre and a depth of 1/4 inch, it is easy to plant and maintain. Ideal seeding times are October in the Southern USA and August in the Northern USA. This seed offers impressive regrowth potential, providing 3-4 grazings per planting.

A forage brassica plant which is used extensively in deer food plots and for livestock grazing. Trophy rapeseed is a fast growing brassica that is heat, cold, and drought tolerant making it adapted to the USA. Rape becomes more attractive to deer after a frost because the sugar content will become more concentrated. Rape is a green leafy fast growing plant that produces large flat leafs that will grow between 12 to 20 inches long and 8 to 15 inches wide and may grow to a height of two to four feet. Forage produced can contain 18 - 20% crude protein. Good cold tolerance allows for harvesting or grazing late into the fall and winter.  

Rapeseed also can be used effectively as a winter cover crop. Its deep tap roots are excellent at breaking soil compaction. The deep roots also help to scavenge after nutrients that are deep within the soil profile. The large amount of bio-mass that rape produces makes it a great green manure. Rape is becoming more and more widely used in cover crops and crop rotations because it establishes quickly, suppresses weed growth, and helps reduce soil erosion. Trophy is a canola type rape which produces large volumes of biomass with equal or higher feed values than alfalfa.
ABOUT
VIDEOS

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

50F - 70F

SEEDING RATE

40 - 50 lbs per acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

3 - 5 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1/2 - 1 inch

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun

USDA ZONES

3 - 10

ESTABLISHMENT RATE

Fast

Buckwheat Cover Crop Seeds
Buckwheat Seed For Sale Bulk Pound Erosion Control
Buckwheat Quick Cover Crop Soil Improver
Buckwheat seeds cover crop matures in 70-90 days, making it a quick cover crop perfect for summer soil improvement. These buckwheat cover crop seeds offer superior wear tolerance and are low maintenance, making them ideal for any farm. Planting buckwheat seeds attracts pollinators, providing essential food sources for bees and beneficial insects. Suitable for various soil types, buckwheat seeds for planting should be sown after the danger of frost has passed.
Buckwheat Seed Sprouts High Germination
Buckwheat seeds cover crop sprouts and grows fast, with a germination period of just 3 to 5 days and flowers blooming in 35 to 40 days. This buckwheat seed option matures into nutritious grain in 70 to 90 days, making it ideal for quick cover crop needs. Buckwheat seeds for planting are low maintenance and require little fertilizer, perfect for various soil types. Plant in spring or summer after frost, at a depth of 1" or less. Complement your planting with clover seeds ground cover, hairy vetch cover crop seeds, or any cover crop seed mix for optimal results.
Buckwheat Seeding Rate For Cover Crops & Forage
Outsidepride Buckwheat seeds cover crop is ideal for filling failed crop gaps with its rapid growth and short growing season. Planting buckwheat cover crop seeds at a seeding rate of 40 to 50 lbs per acre or 3 lbs per 1,000 square feet ensures optimal coverage. The seeds should be planted at a depth of 0.5 to 1.0 inch in spring or summer after all danger of frost is past. For better germination, use more seed when broadcasting and employ a drag harrow to press the seeds into the soil. Buckwheat seeds for planting require low maintenance and little fertilizer since they are great for various soil types.
Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum) - Summer annual which can be used as a green manure crop. An early maturing wheat suitable for almost any type soil. Seeds remain on stalk after ripening, providing food over extended period of time. Buckwheat has a short growing season, maturing in 10 to 12 weeks. It is quickly killed by frost. It is a short-season cash crop with properties that can make it fit specific situations on your farm. While it is unlikely to be your main crop, it can be a worthwhile part of your overall farm plan.

Reasons to grow buckwheat:

  • Fits into rotations at a time when fields might otherwise be idle.
  • Can be grown as a catch crop where another crop failed.
  • Inexpensive to grow because it requires no pesticides and little fertilizer.
  • Can be grown with equipment available on most farms.
  • Requires little attention during the growing season.
  • Mellows the soil and suppresses some weeds.
  • Easily raised Organically, at a premium price.

For more information from Cornell University: Buckwheat


 

 

ABOUT
VIDEOS

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

70F - 95F

SEEDING RATE

30 - 90 lbs per acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

7 - 10 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1/2 - 1 inch

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun to partial shade

USDA ZONES

5 - 10

ESTABLISHMENT RATE

Fast

Cowpeas Field
Cowpeas Bulk Seed Bags For Planting
Outsidepride cowpea seeds (Vigna Unguiculata) are heat and drought-tolerant annual plants that thrive in USDA Zones 5-10, making them ideal for cover crops, food plots, and forage. These nutrient-rich legumes grow between 24-36 inches tall and can improve soil fertility while providing forage for wildlife such as deer, pheasants, turkeys, quail, and farm animals like cattle, hogs, and poultry. Cowpeas prefer well-drained soils with a pH between 6.0-7.0 and full sun to partial shade environments. Despite being perennials in warmer climates, they are typically grown as annuals in the Midwest. It is available in 4 different sizes to suit your gardening needs.
Planting Directions for Cowpeas Seeds
Cow peas are incredibly versatile and can thrive in various regions with the right care. For a fun planting adventure, sow the seeds outdoors after the last frost date and prepare the soil by loosening it and clearing away debris. Smooth out the soil and plant the seeds at a rate of 30-90 pounds per acre, burying them 1/2 to 1 inch deep. These sun-loving plants prefer full sun to partial shade and well-drained soil with a pH of 6.0-7.0. Enjoy the excitement of harvesting the pods young for fresh, tender beans, or let them dry on the plant for delicious dried beans.
Cowpeas Seeds
Pure Cowpea Seeds
Our pure cowpeas seeds offer high-quality options ideal for enhancing soil nitrogen levels because they are carefully selected and tested to ensure superior germination rates and robust growth. These cowpeas are carefully selected to ensure a rich, productive crop, perfect for gardeners and farmers aiming to improve soil health.
GMO Free Cowpeas Seeds
GMO-Free
Our Cowpeas for planting are proudly GMO-free, ensuring a natural growth process without genetic modifications. This commitment to purity means you can plant with confidence, knowing your crops are cultivated from seeds that adhere to the highest standards of natural farming. Enjoy the benefits of robust, healthy plants and productive agricultural practice.
Cold & Heat Tolerant Cowpeas
USDA Zones 5-10 Adaptive
Adaptable to USDA Zones 5-10, our cowpeas, seeds for planting, thrive in a wide range of climates, making them a versatile choice for various regions. These cowpea seeds are designed to perform well in different soil types and weather conditions. Whether you're in a cooler northern region or a warmer southern zone, our cowpeas seeds will adapt and flourish.
Man Packaging Cowpeas Seeds
Fresh and Viable Product
Our cowpea seeds for planting are fresh and viable, ensuring high germination rates for successful planting. Each batch is tested for quality, offering you the best chance for a bountiful harvest. By choosing our cowpeas, seeds for planting, you are investing in a product that promises vigorous growth and robust plants.
Warm Season Cowpeas Legume Field
Our cowpea seeds support greener agriculture by enhancing soil health and fostering biodiversity conservation. By incorporating cowpeas into your planting routine, you contribute to environmental health, ensuring a better farming practice. These versatile seeds improve soil structure and fertility, supporting a balanced ecosystem. Whether you're planting black-eyed peas, purple hull peas, or other cowpea varieties, our seeds promote a healthier, more resilient agricultural system.
High Protein Forage Cowpeas Seed Bags For Planting
This plant is considered high-protein forage because cowpeas are rich in essential nutrients, particularly protein, which is vital for the growth and health of both humans and livestock. The leaves and beans of cowpeas provide a balanced and nutritious diet, making them an excellent source of protein. Additionally, cowpeas are safe for consumption by both humans and animals, as they are naturally non-toxic and free from harmful substances, ensuring a healthy and beneficial addition to diets and feed.

Cowpeas (Vigna Unguiculata) - Cowpeas grow 24 - 36 inches tall and are very heat and drought tolerant. They are very hardy, making them an excellent choice for food plots in the southern United States. Deer, pheasant, turkey, quail and other wildlife eagerly seek out the foliage and grain produced by cowpeas as they grow to maturity.  Other animals such as: cattle, hogs, poultry, goats and other upland game birds will also enjoy feeding on cowpeas.

 

 

Cowpeas are the most heat loving legume found in the United States. They thrive in hot, moist climates, but are also very drought tolerant. Adapted to a wide range of soil types.   Commonly used by farmers for silage and as a cover crop, but also widely planted as a high protein forage. Cowpeas are adapted to a wide range of soils, but prefers well drained soils with a pH between 6.0 - 7.0.  Like all cowpeas, they can be consumed by humans in the form of snap beans and dry beans.

Cowpeas are perennial in USDA Zones 7 - 10, but are often grown in the midwest as an annual in USDA Zone 5 and 6.

Seeding Rate: 30 - 90 lbs per acre
Planting Depth: 1/2 - 1 inch deep

ABOUT
VIDEOS

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

60F +

SEEDING RATE

20 - 25 lbs / acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

7 - 14 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1/2 - 3/4 inch

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun

USDA ZONES

2 - 9

ESTABLISHMENT RATE

Fast

White Proso Millet (Panicum miliaceum) - Proso millet is one of the most drought tolerant and cost effective warm season annual grasses that produces large amounts of grain. It is the shortest growing millet and works best in grazing mixes the northern US. Proso millet is an excellent seed producing making it is a great plant for game bird or other wildlife mixes. It performs well in mixes for wildlife cover and is popular for dove, quail, turkey and duck fields. It is also sued as feed for cattle or forage for deer and rabbits.

Proso millet is also a gluten-free, drought-tolerant ancient grain used for human food and birdseed. Known for its mild, nutty flavor and quick cooking time. It's rich in protein, fiber, and minerals, making it a nutritious alternative to rice or quinoa, suitable for dishes like porridge, pilafs, and salads, and it thrives in warm, dry climates where other crops struggle.

Another great use of proso millet is as a cover crop. It is a fast-growing ideal as a short-term summer cover crop (60 – 90 days) for soil protection, weed suppression, and erosion control. It thrives in dry conditions, requiring low moisture to grow 3 - 6 feet tall, and is an excellent option for breaking up crop rotations to improve soil health.

  • Application or Use: Cover Crop, Erosion Control, Cattle Forage, Livestock Grazing, Food Plot
  • Germination Time: 5 - 7 days, under optimal conditions
  • Growing Locations: Warm Season, Transition Zone, Cool Season
  • Height: 3 - 6 feet
  • Sunlight Requirements: 8+ hours, full sun for best results
  • Advantages: Increased drought tolerance; high seed producer under hot, dry conditions.
  • When to Plant: Recommend planting time is spring and summer when night time temperatures are consistently 65+ degrees.
  • Maturity: 60 - 90 days
  • Seeding Rate: 20 lbs per acre
ABOUT

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

40F +

SEEDING RATE

30 lbs/acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

7 - 14 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1.5 - 2 inches

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun

USDA ZONES

3 - 9

ESTABLISHMENT RATE

Slow

Lentils (Lens culinaris) - Spring Lentils (planted early spring, matured by fall) are cool season annual vegetables in the legume family. Grown across the world for human consumption they are high in protein and low in fat. They also are able to deposit nitrogen into the soil making this a great cover crop to include in your rotation. Individual plants may vary from single stems to vigorous, bushy forms in dense or sparse stands that normally reach 12 - 18 inches tall. Flowers are small, less than 1/2 inch long, and white, pale purple, or purple black. Lentils prefer cool weather, full sun, and a well-drained soil pH from 6 - 8. You can also grow these in drought-prone areas however, the yields will likely be reduced. Plant with potatoes, cucumbers, and summer savor. Avoid planting with onions or garlic.

Lentils compete poorly with weeds for light, water, and nutrients. During early stages of vegetative growth and in cool weather, lentil growth rates are slow and weeds can quickly overgrow the crop.  A seeding depth of 1.5 - 2 inches is optimal for germination and growth, even though deeper plantings may have better access to soil moisture and improved protection from frost.  Planting can occur any time after ground temperature sustains 40 - 45F.

Difference between Winter and Spring Lentils:

  • Planting Time: Spring lentils are sown as soon as soil hits 40F - 45F, usually April – May. Winter lentils are sown in late September or early October, settling in before winter.
  • Harvest and Maturity: Winter lentils reach maturity 3 – 4 weeks earlier than spring-sown varieties, allowing them to avoid late-summer drought conditions.
  • Yields: Winter lentils typically produce higher yields and more pods than spring varieties due to a longer growing season and better moisture utilization.
  • Hardiness: Spring lentils can withstand light frost (down to 21F). Winter lentils are highly hardy, able to survive temperatures below -25F (Zone 5b).
  • Production Area: While spring lentils are common, winter lentils are highly valued in the U.S. Pacific Northwest for reducing erosion in conservation tillage systems.
  • Winter Lentils: Offer better weed control (better competition), improve rotation with winter cereals, and increase yields.
  • Spring Lentils: Offer immediate convenience and are more widespread, but risk heat stress during blooming.
ABOUT

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

55F

SEEDING RATE

20 - 30 lbs/acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

7 - 14 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1/4 - 1/2 inch

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun

USDA ZONES

3 - 9

Common Flax (Linum usitatissimum) - Also known as linseed. It is a flowering, short-lived, annual subshrub. In its native habitat, it can be grown as a perennial, but it is not cold tolerant. The thin, wiry stems that support the flower buds appear delicate, but are difficult to break.  It produces pale blue flowers on slender, but strong, stems in late spring into mid-summer. Flax is a plant known historically for fiber production. The seed is used to produce edible oils and also oils for wood finishing products.

Common flax prefers moist, well-drained, mildly acid, neutral and mildly alkaline soils. It does best in full sun and cannot grow in the shade. The plant tolerates strong winds but not maritime exposure. It will tolerate drought and dry or rocky soil, but clay soils can cause the plant to root shallowly that will cause problems for the plant in cold weather. 

It is a versatile cover crop used for soil conditioning, especially effective at fighting compaction and increasing mycorrhizal fungi activity. It is best used in mixes (e.g., with oats, vetch, or peas) to build soil health, as it is non-competitive and can be easily seeded at 20 - 30 lbs/acre.  Its fibrous roots improve soil structure and its flowers attract pollinators and beneficial insects.  As a cover crop, flax helps to mobilize phosphorus in the soil and add organic matter. Plant early Spring or late Summer.

ABOUT

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

40F +

SEEDING RATE

8 - 10 lbs/acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

5 to 10 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1/4 - 1/2 inch

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun

USDA ZONES

3 - 9

ESTABLISHMENT RATE

Rapid

Camelina (Camelina sativa) - is an oilseed that is getting attention for its omega-3 nutritional attributes and as a possible, affordable source for biodiesel. It contains about 34 to 36 percent omega-3 oil. It has many names such as: usually known as camelina, gold-of-pleasure, or false flax, but also occasionally as wild flax, linseed dodder, German sesame, or Siberian oilseed.

Camelina is well suited for marginal soils. According to Montana State University (MSU) research, camelina has a lower break-even cost than wheat and canola. The seed can be broadcast or drilled.  The seeds are dense and small at 345,000 to 465,000 seeds per pound. Yields vary depending on soils and rainfall. Based on MSU research, camelina will average 1,800 to 2,200 pounds per acre under 16- to 18-inch rainfalls. In other dryland research trials by MSU, camelina yields averaged 1,000 to 1,700 per acre. Yields drop with less rainfall and increase when using irrigation. Montana State suggests including camelina in a three- or four-year crop rotation.

Camelina can be grown as a cover crop either alone or more commonly as part of a cover crop mix. Mostly winter camelina is used as a cover crop for a fall to spring cover, but spring camelina can also be used depending on climate and seed availablity.

  • Nitrogen fixation: Camelina holds onto nitrogen especially as an overwintered cover crops.
  • Pollinator effect: Camelina will bloom earlier than most other flowering species so provides an early nectar source in spring.
  • Soil aeration: Camelina has one main tap root that has been shown to help with compacted soils.
  • Drought tolerance: Camelina is very drought tolerant once established compared to most other cover crops.
  • Other benefits: It can grow well in the shade so good in a cover crop mix. It grows well in low fertility environments. It is also good at helping control erosion.
ABOUT

Planting Directions

SOWING TEMPERATURE

50F

SEEDING RATE

30 - 75 lbs/acre

AVERAGE GERMINATION TIME

7 - 14 days

PLANTING DEPTH

1/2 - 1 inch deep

SOWING METHOD

Broadcast or drill

ENVIRONMENT

Full sun to partial shade

USDA ZONES

4 - 9

ESTABLISHMENT RATE

Fast

Common Vetch (Vicia sativa) - Common vetch is a fast establishing, high-yielding winter annual legume perfect for a winter forage, cover crop, pollinator habitat and supports wildlife. It is not winter-hardy, so it is best to be used in southern areas or where winter survival is not important. It can also be planted early spring for plowdown in early summer. It is a viny, succulent, attaining a height of 24 inches when planted alone. It grows faster than hairy vetch in Spring, is more economical for seed, and is preferred for forage due to lower toxicity risks compared to hairy vetch.

Common vetch grows on a wide range of soils. It does well on loams, sandy loams, or gravelly soils, as well as on fine-textured clay soils as long as there is good drainage. Although common vetch tolerates short periods of saturated soils, it does not tolerate extended flooding. Common vetch tolerates pH of 5.5 - 8.2, but optimum pH is 6.5. It is used successfully as a cover crop in vineyards and orchards. In vineyards, common vetch is less likely to climb trellises than hairy vetch.

  • Soil Fertility and Health: A nitrogen fixing legume, common vetch converts nitrogen into soil-available nutrients which reduces the need for synthetic fertilizers. It acts as an excellent green manure, adding significant organic matter.
  • Erosion Control and Weed Supression: The extensive, deep root system holds soil in place. As a fast-growing, dense cover crop, it acts as a living mulch that reduces weeds and soil moisture evaporation.
  • Forage and Livestock Feed: Common vetch is high in protein (up to 25%) and is used for hay, silage, and pasture, particularly for cows, sheep, and deer. It can be grown in mixtures with cereals like oats for enhanced forage.
  • Environmental Benefits: It supports pollinators, such as bees, with nectar. It is also used in phytoremediation to accumulate contaminants in the soil.
  • Crop Rotation: It is an effective nitrogen-adding component in crop rotations, improving soil for subsequent crops.

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