Great video. Love the chicory and plantain information. I've grazed improved chicory as a component of a pasture mix in the past, excellent forage. Looking forward to including some of these in my pastures in the future.
@keithberns910 have you ever heard of a novel endophyte changing back to a toxic version? I've never heard of this happening from anyone other than this 1 person, so I'm trying to figure out if this is new data or someone that's just mistaken for what's happening or he possibly was sold Kentucky 31 thinking it was another variety or maybe it was spread into his pasture by animals and it's gained a foothold.
Great video. Love the chicory and plantain information. I've grazed improved chicory as a component of a pasture mix in the past, excellent forage. Looking forward to including some of these in my pastures in the future.
Great video
Thanks for the video!
Great videos! Keep them coming!
Thank you
I've heard from someone that the endophyte in Kentucky 32 has a tendency to revert to the 1 that's in Kentucky 31. Is there any truth in that.
Kentucky 32 is endophyte free - so there is nothing to revert back to
@keithberns910 ok, I thought that Kentucky 32 was the 1 that had the non toxic endophyte.
@@Nightowl5454 No, it is endophyte free. Others like Estanchia have the novel, non toxic endophyte
@keithberns910 have you ever heard of a novel endophyte changing back to a toxic version? I've never heard of this happening from anyone other than this 1 person, so I'm trying to figure out if this is new data or someone that's just mistaken for what's happening or he possibly was sold Kentucky 31 thinking it was another variety or maybe it was spread into his pasture by animals and it's gained a foothold.
@bryanclark8405 I have never heard of it reverting - so I am thinking your theory might be correct