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Grazing North Texas

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By Tony Dean | [email protected]

There are all kinds of plants out there on the range. Many of them are good grazing for livestock, but some are not that good. We need to know the difference, and there is a reason why.

Suppose you are looking for some grazing land to lease. You find a pasture that is available, and the owner agrees to meet you for a drive-through of his land. The first thing you notice is a beautiful flowing grass, and you are thinking, “Anything that looks that good has got to be good for livestock.”

In North Texas, that grass could be Meadow dropseed. Meadow dropseed is a perennial grass that grows in large dense tufts with flat and narrow leaves up to 24 inches long. These long leaves, when mature, seem to flow with the wind. It may grow as individual plants or as small monocultures but rarely occupies a large amount of the pasture.

To read more pick up a copy of NTFR magazine. To subscribe call 940-872-5922.

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Outdoor

Grazing North Texas: Rescuegrass

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By Tony Dean, [email protected]

If moisture is adequate, there are several winter annual grasses that dominate the landscape during early spring in Texas. One of the most common is Rescuegrass.

This winter annual is native to South America but grows over much of the United States and can be found in all ecoregions of Texas. Rescuegrass is easily recognized by its flat seed head.
Numerous seed heads produce seed that is transported by animals and can quickly spread to other areas.

To read more, pick up a copy of the April issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.

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Outdoor

The Garden Guy

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By Norman Winter | Horticulturist, Author, Speaker

The National Garden Bureau has designated 2024 as the ‘Year of the Angelonia’ and I am in full celebration mode. As I was preparing for my contribution to the celebration, I was, however, sent into taxonomic trauma.

For the last 26 years of deep love for the Angelonia, or summer snapdragon, I have told everyone via newspaper, radio and television that they were in the Scrophulariaceae family. Since most gardeners don’t like those words, I modified or simplified the snapdragon family, but somebody has tinkered with green industry happiness and moved Angelonia to the Plantaginaceae or plantain family. I immediately reached out to my friend Dr. Allen Ownings, Horticulture Professor Emeritus with the Louisiana State University AgCenter. I said, “Did you know this, or better yet, did you do it?” He said, as I expected, that the Taxonomist group had done it. This reminded me that someone once said taxonomists have to eat, too.

To read more, pick up a copy of the April issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.

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Outdoor

Parting Shot: Grit Against the Storm…

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By Jelly Cocanougher

Brazen rumbles cut through the daylight stillness. Enamored by the grandiose symphony of the firmament, tinged in anticipation from where the light will snap next.
The clouds dance in the sky as a love letter to the electrically-charged synergy of the ground and air. It moves unashamed, reckless, and bold. It is raw power that could command attention for any being, a reminder that we are attuned to the primal opus of flora and fauna. The spirit of the prairie was awakened, the hands of a cowboy rests at the heart of it all, a symphony in combination.

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