Alfalfa

southernblues

New member
Was reading another post that was mentioning alfalfa and wanted to ask some questions as it's been 20+ yrs since my family raised it and I was too young to remember these items:

- how many cuttings can you get off alfalfa?
- avg ton/acre per cutting?
- avg price per ton? i'm seeing $90-100 per ton, would assume that goes up with drought yrs/areas


I remember it being a very delicate crop and when it's ready you drop everything you are doing to get it out. Any other data would be great.
 
I'll throw in what I know, from raising it for horse feed. It's sold on it's RFV score, price for untested 100.00 per ton 2.50 to 3.50 per small bale, tested upto around 300-400 per ton for RFV 230+ "dairy hay", depending on market. First cut needs to be prior to 10% of the field in bloom. Pheasants love to nest in it, and you will kill a lot if you cut when it's ready. 3 or 4 cuttings annually, irrigated 6 usually. As the cuttings proceed they get finer and the RFV gets higher, normally. Ending with "rabbit food", a term we use for cuttings that are all leaf. Only nutrition is the leaf by the way, stems are roughage. We interseed with orchard grass, adds value to the first cut, and will extend the 3rd and 4th. Being a legume it fixes nitrogen which benefits the grasses. It also mines nutrients, and minerals from deep in the soil. A stand, cared for and nutured will last 3 to 4 years, then you will have to replant. Needs a specific blend of minerals and nutrients, in the Kansas City area, we seem to be always short of Boron. Alfalfa really needs/likes? Boron so we apply annually. There are various specialty varieties, designed for various latitudes, based on resistence to disease, and pests etc. I would use the perrenial recommended by the Ag Extension for your area, or used by a current grower with success. Avoid the annual varieties, they are expensive and mostly used as green manure crop. You can seed in the early spring or fall, We use the grass seeder on an Oliver drill, and drag to get good ground contact on "worked" soil. We usually seed with oats as a cover crop, cut the oats, and or bale it at boot stage, leaving the alfalfa/timothy already sprouted and thriving. One caution, don't cut to short or to late, it has a tendency to freeze out in the crowns during severe winters, and you will lose it. Needs a decent regrowth to insure survival. Alfalfa is a Middle Eastern plant, the word is adapted from Arabic, and roughly translated means, "excellent fodder". I have recently been experimenting with the newer lespedezas, NOT the bush varieties, which are bad news!!!! Like the University of Missouri's Marion variety, because it is quail freindly, I have no pheasants in my area, but I'd like to encourage the quail. It looks good so far, and the harvest was on par with alfalfa last year. Only two cuttings, same yield. It does not lose much RFV as it matures, and is virtually pest free so far, quail could be found along the edges almost always, to get the seed from plants which were in corners or field edges and didn't get mowed or hayed. I believe we got some nesting in it as well. Not an effective nitrogen fixer however. Good Luck. Keep us posted.
 
Last edited:
You asked about ton per acre as well, here on unirrigated ground, around 2 to 4 tons, depending on number of cuts, and moisture. Irrigated anywhere from 6-8 tons. Grows well in heat as long as it gets timely moisture, ( doesn't everything).
 
You asked about ton per acre as well, here on unirrigated ground, around 2 to 4 tons, depending on number of cuts, and moisture. Irrigated anywhere from 6-8 tons. Grows well in heat as long as it gets timely moisture, ( doesn't everything).

does that 2 to 4 tons include all cuttings (assuming 2-4, maybe 5)?
 
For me on upland sites, and not premium ground yes, You may well do better, I would expect 4.5 to 6 tons from all cuttings, you may get 8 in the early years, but you are sacrificing some long term viability, for the sake of production, it may well be worth it, but requires more input than I am willing to do in both cost and effort. You will almost always get at least 3 cuttings, the quality goes up the amount goes down in equal proportions.
 
Last edited:
So I was thinking --- we currently rent our family farm for $60/acre for the tillable. If I was to peel out 25-30 acres of that and sow to Alfalfa, realizing costs for sowing, soil pH/prep....it's good soil and conservatively think I could get 3-4 tons per acre of Alfalfa.


If I got say, 5 tons through 4 cuttings on 30 acres, that's 150 tons at conservative $100 per ton = $15,000...minus a moderate 30% for overhead...$10k for 30 acres, nice hunting trip fund...

This is not a business plan per say, however I already have 90 horse JD tractor, mower and rake...figure I could pick up used baler and I think I could make a run. I realize the sensitivity around managing alfalfa compared to say fescue or prairie hay...

What else am I missing? I also have large gooseneck with big truck to haul although I remember 20 yrs ago the dairy farmers in MO coming over state line to pick up themselves in yrs where it was dry and alfalfa was hard to get.
 
To get a premium price you will need to square bale, small or large, truckers hate roiunders! I'd opt for small squares, prefered by horse people, and doesn't require specialized equipment, you'll need dry storage and even with the small acreage your talking, you'll want to add an accumulator of some kind unless you want a heck of a workout. NH 1010's and 1012's will do the job and can be found in good shape for $1000-1500 only need 35 hp to run, weight more important than hp. Get a good baler, IMO, JD balers make better, (tighter) bales, and stayed tuned , NH tend to bale a little softer, and require a little more attention, NH had several series of balers which had a faster stroke cycle than the rest of the machine could handle, but a good one is a good one no matter what color! Try to see it run before you buy.
 
Back
Top