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Cover Crops for Vegetable Growers

Why cover crops?
Soil Health

Newsletter articles

Early summer
Mid and late summer
Late summer legumes
Early fall

Fall
Early spring

Cover crop information

Annual ryegrass
Buckwheat
Sudangrass
Mustard, spring
Mustard, fall (includes radish, rape, kale)
Red clover
Hairy vetch

Oats
Wheat (includes spelt, triticale)
Rye

Photos

Seed sources


Research

Buckwheat planting date
Buckwheat field preparation

Fertility

Cover crops for mid- to late summer
Annual ryegrass; late season buckwheat and sudangrass

Early vegetable harvest begins in mid- to late summer. Rather than leave the ground open to grow up to weeds, the land can be improved by holding it with a cover crop. Reducing weed seed production is an obvious advantage that will be appreciated the following year. Using the great growing conditions of late summer also allows you to address soil health issues by choosing a cover crop that directly targets properties that are a concern. Hard surface soil and subsurface compaction are both limitations that are common in vegetable production. Both inhibit crop growth directly, and create favorable conditions for soilborne diseases by reducing percolation. Late summer cover crops also scavenge leftover nitrogen, and add a lot of organic matter. Those processes provide both the organic nitrogen reserves and the food for the microbes that increase the soil’s potentially mineralizable nitrogen.

For planting in July, the main choices are buckwheat and sudangrass. These two cover crops are at their best sown in July, and can be sown into early August. Annual ryegrass becomes a possibility beginning in August.

Last month’s article described making the choice between buckwheat and sudangrass. Buckwheat works in a shorter window (40 d), is excellent on weeds and leaves the soil mellow and ready to plant. Sudangrass and its relative, sorghum-sudangrass, are great for producing organic matter and penetrating a plow layer, but need a longer window (70d), higher fertility and more management. This article contains more information on annual ryegrass, which can be grown into the fall, but more commonly on through the winter.

One of the big advantages of buckwheat is that it works in a little more than a month, and leaves the ground ready to plant. The short cycle lets you use buckwheat between summer crops. It can even fit between peas and broccoli. It goes especially well before fall grains, being done in time to sow grain at the ideal time. Buckwheat can be sown as late as mid-August, but growth slows down at its normal mid-September ripening time. There are also many other cover crop choices available then.

Sudangrass needs over two months before the following crop is planted. By late July seedings, it will best be used as a winter-killed cover. Early July seedings may leave time to establish winter rye.

Buckwheat seeded in July and early August sets seed quickly. If spring buckwheat volunteers are hard for you to control, make sure to stop the cover crop at the right time. If it is mowed too early (30 d) it will regrow and make seed in less than a month. If it is mowed or incorporated too late (45d) it will already have viable seed that will sprout in the spring. Buckwheat volunteers tend not to be a problem with row crops that have early cultivation or post-emergence herbicide programs.

Annual ryegrass

For August seeding, if you want an overwintering cover crop, the choice is annual ryegrass. It improves soil health by correcting hard surface soil because it creates a sod. It does more for hard surface soil than buckwheat, but takes much longer, and requires some time for decomposition. Sudangrass has a coarser and deeper root system that is valuable for correcting plow-pan compaction. Annual ryegrass is also good for weed suppression. It grows vigorously enough to outcompete late summer annuals as well as winter annuals that start in the fall.

Annual ryegrass is a good cover crop choice on heavier ground, because it has better flooding tolerance than other cover crops.

For weed control, a rapid start and vigorous growth are essential. A rapid start depends on good soil moisture. Vigorous growth depends on available nitrogen as well. There is often a substantial amount of nitrogen left after vegetables. However, if there is not, 30 lb/ac of N can double fall growth of the ryegrass. With these conditions annual ryegrass will outcompete weed seedlings, but establish weeds must be killed before sowing the cover crop.

The key to successful seeding is to get the seed in contact with moisture. Under dry conditions, drilling is essential. If the soil surface is moist, broadcasting without covering is effective. Good seedling growth requires continued moisture. July and early August tend to be too dry to support July-sown annual ryegrass seedlings. July seedings can succeed with irrigation or in wet years, but buckwheat and sudangrass are much better then. Weak seedling growth can be an advantage when established between beds on plastic mulch.

Annual ryegrass will mostly overwinter, especially where there is good snow cover. Winter survival varies considerably among varieties: Southern types will kill, where Midwestern ones will survive. The variety is often not specified in the New York market, so winter survival my not be consistent. For more predictable performance, specific varieties can be ordered from Oregon through your dealer.

August seeded annual ryegrass makes a dense sod by spring. That is valuable for improving the soil condition and for nitrogen scavenging. However, it takes some decomposition after spring tillage to break it up.

The major concern with annual ryegrass is that it not go to seed in the spring. It can be controlled by tillage. Once the air is warm, glyphosate also works. Glyphosate is not effective while days are still in the 40s. In vegetables, the common grass herbicides control annual ryegrass. Annual ryegrass volunteers are particularly undesirable in small grains, so special care must be taken if they are part of your rotation.

When planting annual ryegrass in August, it is worth having a plan for how the field will be prepared in the spring. The plan should include a method for killing the sod, and allow time for it to decompose before the field is fitted and planted.

Annual ryegrass can be interseeded into crops that will be harvested in late August or September. If conditions are moist, simply broadcasting seed on the surface is enough. Interseeding is best done just before the crop fills the canopy. The crop will begin to establish a shallow root system, but will not be competitive in the shade of the crop. This early sod could reduce damage from harvest traffic, and could help speed the recovery of the soil after harvest. Interseeding into a vegetable crop allows the cover crop to establish better in the fall than does a grain sown well after vegetable harvest.

For August seeding, the planting rates are 10 lb/ac if drilled into reasonably moist soil, 15 lb/ac in dryer soil. Broadcasting requires 15-20 lb/ac. On dry soil, rated can go as high as 30 lb/ac. Seed cost is usually under a dollar a pound. Seedway distributes annual ryegrass seed in New York.

This article is intended for publication in Cornell Cooperative Extension newsletters, and similar outlets, that reach growers by late Junet.