Plat
No.
Variety GrownHay,
lbs.
Yield
per
acre,
lbs.
1 June Clover4732,365
2Mammoth Clover4752,375
3Alsike Clover4132,065
4[1]Alfalfa (first cutting) 26 inches high, June 29th8164,080
5 Blue-grass5752,875
6Orchard grass4782,390
7Timothy5602,800
8Red-top4702,350
9Meadow fescue3751,875
10Tall meadow oat grass6003,000
11Italian rye grass........
12[2]Timothy, blue-grass and orchard grass mixed2031,015

[1] The alfalfa plat yielded a second cutting 26 inches high on August 2nd, and a third 24 inches high September 1st; there was also a six-inch after-growth estimated at 180 pounds. The total alfalfa yield was equivalent, “approximately to 612 tons of good dry forage.” None of the other clovers or grasses gave more than one cutting.

[2] Robbed somewhat of both plant food and moisture by an adjacent row of grown cottonwood trees.

The Nebraska experiment station has made very careful tests of the comparative yields of various grasses, clovers and mixtures. These were on plats of one-fifth of an acre. The foregoing table shows the yields the second year from planting, which owing to the very dry spring was a quite unfavorable season.

COMPARED WITH CORN

The Colorado station reports a comparison with corn as follows:

Yield per acre of Corn and Alfalfa
Corn, lbs.Alfalfa, lbs.
Dry Matter3,6055,611
Albuminoids  2961,198
Starch, Sugar, etc.2,1863,114
Fiber1,0601,198
Fat   63  101

INDIVIDUAL INSTANCES OF CASH RETURNS

A Lincoln county, Kansas, farmer writes that from five acres of alfalfa he received in one season $100 for hay, $150 for seed and $20 for straw.

A farmer near Atwood, Rawlins county, Kansas, cut two crops for hay and threshed the third crop for seed, realizing 13 bushels per acre, which sold at $5 per bushel.