The best way to get it going is to ask questions or make comments.
Does everyone know that P when needed (which is mostly, going by
pasture analyses I've seen from many countries) grows cheaper pasture
than artificial N in pastures with adequate good clovers?
When P is low the artificial N responses are lower than when P is adequate.
Adequate P with other necessary elements gives a fertile soil which
grows lots of pasture without artificial N.
It is spring in New Zealand where the average herd size in 300,
sometimes milked by one person, so farmers are flat out calving and
milking.
>Is there a problem with my computor or is nobody sending any emails
>lately? I haven't had an email from graze-l since October 16!
> Bill
>
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