Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Capital RC&D Hosts Pasture Walks May 20, July 13 In Adams, Franklin Counties To Showcase Spring Cover Crop Grazing

The
Capital Resource Conservation and Development Council will host Pasture Walks on May 20 in Adams County and July 13 in Franklin County to showcase spring cover crop grazing.

Fall planted cover crops can provide valuable nutrition for grazing livestock when used as part of a grazing system and regular crop rotation. 

Even though they are grazed, the cover crops will continue to provide soil health benefits by helping to reduce erosion, feed soil microbes and minimize weed pressure in the spring. 

Successfully integrating cover crop grazing is tied to development of infrastructure, such as perimeter fencing and watering systems, cover crop selection, crop rotation, and training livestock to a grazing system. 

May 20 - Adams County

These topics will be the focus of a pasture walk hosted by Capital RC&D at Kehr Acres in Adams County, Pennsylvania on May 20, 2021 from 10:00 a.m. to Noon.

Kehr Acres is a crop and beef farm in Littlestown, PA, owned by Matt Kehr and his father David Kehr. 

They started grazing cover crops in 2020 as part of Capital RC&D’s cover crop grazing initiative, and this spring will graze their herd on a cover crop mix of fall planted rye, ryegrass, crimson clover, and hairy vetch prior to planting corn in June. 

Matt will share details about their cover crop mix, crop rotation, infrastructure choices and livestock training during the May 20th pasture walk. 

Technical advisors and researchers will be onsite to share detail about ongoing research and address specific questions.

July 13 - Franklin County

An additional cover crop grazing pasture walk is scheduled for July 13, 9:30 a.m. to Noon with Alan Jaymes, Sylvan Angus, in Mercersburg, PA (Little Cove Valley, Franklin County).

Capital RC&D’s Promoting Grazing and Cover Cropping by Developing Better Practice Information, Outreach and Cost-sharing project, a collaboration between researchers from Penn State University, grazing specialists from USDA-NRCS, grazing advisors from Capital RC&D, and researchers from USDA-ARS, that is funded through a National Fish and Wildlife Foundation Chesapeake Bay Small Watershed grant.

Registration is requested to meet appropriate physical distancing requirements and can be made online, by emailing info@capitalrcd.org, or by calling 717-241-4361- please leave a message for extension 15.

For more information and other educational resources, visit the Capital RC&D Grazing Support webpage or contact Cheryl Burns at Capital RC&D at 717-241-4361 or via email at cburns@capitalrcd.org

Visit the Capital Resource Conservation and Development Council for more information on programs, assistance, upcoming events and more.  Click Here to sign up for regular updates.

The Capital RC&D serves Adams, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Lancaster, Lebanon, and York counties.

[Posted: April 28, 2021]  PA Environment Digest

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