Interesting Facts About the Roots of Eastern Gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides)

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 21

  • @oldstudbuck3583
    @oldstudbuck3583 Před 2 měsíci

    Good stuff

  • @brentmeadows9602
    @brentmeadows9602 Před 2 lety +2

    Great talk - Loaded with info - wow!
    Great for hard pan soils - improvement!
    Eastern Gamagrass may have been a precusor to corn.
    I just got my 1lb back of e.g.g from Roundstone seed that I plan to plant in places.
    Big seeds take a while to germinate but are fun to grow individually in pots - and gift the plants.

    • @brentmeadows9602
      @brentmeadows9602 Před 2 lety

      Oops.. pardon, naming a 'competitor' - I did not realize Hamilton was a vendor! Nice web site -- I will look more! [ from eastern TN ]

  • @hammbone1612
    @hammbone1612 Před rokem +1

    Very informative. Thanks for your time

  • @great0789
    @great0789 Před rokem +1

    Each and every note you just mentioned in this video was music to my ears!!!
    All I need to know is… is it good livestock and horse forage????
    Thank you!!!!

    • @brettbaer9804
      @brettbaer9804 Před rokem +1

      It’s called the ice cream grass for its richness and palatability. But do your homework, because it needs to be established without grazing for a year, cut or grazed once in year two and maintained in a management intensive grazing program going forward, otherwise livestock will selectively overgraze it due to it being such superior warm weather forage. Lots of good information online.

  • @graziergeek
    @graziergeek Před 3 měsíci

    I thought Hamilton were in Texas Co, MO. Where in the world in south of the MO River did you get a core so deep without a rock? Yes, I see the clay in the bottom half but there’s at least a foot of dark soil. Wow

    • @graziergeek
      @graziergeek Před 3 měsíci

      I mean no disrespect. I love your vids. I tried remote MIG about 20 years ago. The fescue (and the fact you can’t run a farm remotely) caused me to sell out 16 years later.
      That professor was probably showing a “typical” core from the UM farm by Columbia.
      I’ve tried a lot of things. Wish I were on the farm every day, I’d have avoided some mishaps.
      Please keep sending this great information. I may move to the farm and try it full time (or start off with summer stockers)

  • @joedrinkwalter94
    @joedrinkwalter94 Před 2 měsíci

    What about blue gamma grass? Does it have as deep of a root system and similar soil beneficial properties?

    • @HamiltonNativeOutpost
      @HamiltonNativeOutpost  Před 2 měsíci

      @@joedrinkwalter94 are you meaning blue grama? They’re not really related. It’s not really native to our area so we haven’t worked much with it. More prevalent west.

  • @EarthREALTOR
    @EarthREALTOR Před rokem

    The root channels also help to get rain water down to the aquifers. Very similar to teosinte - Corn's ancestor.

    • @casey_spencer
      @casey_spencer Před 9 měsíci +1

      Corn is believed to be a hybrid of teosinte and gamagrass

  • @olsonlr
    @olsonlr Před 7 měsíci

    Is gama grass the best for deep penetrating roots?

  • @kevinfoster4129
    @kevinfoster4129 Před rokem

    Will this Gama Grass grow well in subtropics

  • @alsuarez6413
    @alsuarez6413 Před rokem

    When do you recommend to put the seed in the ground ( I am in North Florida, Thanks

    • @HamiltonNativeOutpost
      @HamiltonNativeOutpost  Před rokem

      Eastern Gamagrass needs seeded in the dormant season. We aim for ~2 months before the average date of last spring frost. However, it needs to be around 15-30 days after the average first frost date of fall. (Basically plant in the winter).

  • @timshirk6261
    @timshirk6261 Před 2 lety

    What happens to the long roots in a haying situation where it gets mowed to 6” . How far back do the roots die back ?

    • @HamiltonNativeOutpost
      @HamiltonNativeOutpost  Před 2 lety

      Great question. In my studies, I do read that cutting the leaves of the grass cause the root system to contract. Additionally, the more frequently and severely the greenery is cut back, the more that the root system is pruned. So, while I don't have any exact numbers on how much the roots die back when haying native warm season grasses, I believe that they would die back some. I can say that they are likely to die back less if the mower is not allowed to mow too close to the ground. Mowing close to the ground on native warm season grasses will cut off the growing point and it takes more energy for the grass to regrow likely causing a larger retraction of the root system.

    • @johngraham8893
      @johngraham8893 Před rokem

      @@HamiltonNativeOutpost So in a typical farming situation when it is grazed and cut down to a few inches all these high preforming factors will suffer?

    • @flyhigh5056
      @flyhigh5056 Před 3 měsíci

      @@johngraham8893 Yes, shouldnt be cut less than 8", last cut typically no later than July 1st