Don't put your scythes away for the season just yet! Now is a great time of year to mow tall dry grasses for use as animal bedding, garden mulch, or dry matter for compost piles. Reed Canary grass is my favorite dry grass. It's easy to mow and yields a tremendous volume of straw. At this time of year, the seeds have all fallen off, and since it's a dominant monoculture, there aren't many other plants mixed in, so it makes a great seed-free mulch. When harvested in dry weather, it requires no further drying, and you can put it directly in a haystack, or pile it high in your barn or chicken coop for winter bedding. The big hollow stems are great for keeping air in a compost pile. So after you use it for bedding, the manure and straw mix is very compostable. It doesn't form a dense anaerobic mass (like hay or leaves do), that takes forever to break down. The video below shows how I mow Reed Canary Grass: This next video shows how we bring the Reed Canary grass straw in from the field. I don't have a real barn here yet, so I store the straw on my Pyramid Haystack frame next to my goose house, and cover it with a tarp. In the winter, it's easy to take off the tarp, and pull off as much straw as I need for bedding at a time for my geese, and then cover the stack back up again.
3 Comments
6/3/2010 06:55:48 am
I want to give this ago... any suggestions for planting ? Is it necessary to plough over existing grasses ? Seems its quite competitive and would beat normal grasses and overwhelm them easy. How about seeds... a quick search gave me this http://www.apetit.eu/inpage/apetit-lesknice/ is it the same thing ?
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Botan Anderson
8/12/2010 12:23:43 am
No that's not the same. What you would need to look for is Phalaris arundinacea L.
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