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River Festival buttons increase after May 7

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The Wichita River Festival will be May 29-June 6. Buttons are $5 if you order them before May 7 – but after that date, the price jumps to $10 this year.

For more information, go to wichitariverfest.com.

Controlling Weeds in Home Garden Asparagus Beds

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Photo credit: Rob Ireton
The best time to control weeds in asparagus is early spring before the asparagus emerges. A light tilling (or hoeing) that is shallow enough to avoid the crowns will eliminate existing weeds. Many gardeners like to mix in organic matter during the same operation.

Herbicides can be used before asparagus emerges. Glyphosate (Roundup, Killzall) will kill weeds that are actively growing, and the preemergence herbicide trifluralin can be used to kill weed seeds as they germinate. Trifluralin is found in several products, but not all of them list asparagus on the label. Those that do have asparagus on the label include Miracle-Gro Weed Preventer Granules and Monterey Vegetable and Ornamental Weeder. Mulch can also be used to keep weeds from invading.

No herbicides can be used during harvest. The end of harvest presents another opportunity. Remove all fern and spears and apply Roundup to control virtually all of the weeds present. Past the harvest season and after regrowth of the asparagus, options are limited. Products that contain sethoxydim can be applied to asparagus to kill grassy weeds. Sethoxydim has no effect on broadleaves including asparagus. Two sethoxydim products available to homeowners and labeled for asparagus are Monterey Grass Getter and Hi-Yield Grass Killer. With broadleaves, the only option is to pull them and look forward to next year. (Ward Upham)

A Growing Interest in Forage Sorghum

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Photo credit: Cyndy Sims Parr

Continued research on sorghum could help cattle producers diversify their feedstuffs.

GARDEN CITY, Kan. – As winter soon comes to a close, it is never too early to start planning feedstuffs production for cattle next winter. Forage sorghum offers a variety of benefits that help secure its place as one of those major feedstuffs.

“Interest in forage sorghum is definitely on the rise,” said John Holman, K-State Research and Extension agronomist based in Garden City. “There is a lot of interest in general to supply cow-calf, feedlot and dairy industries in the region.”

The growing interest is in part due to the versatility of forage sorghums, he said. Other advantages of sorghum include that it uses less water than some other traditional forage crops and, when managed correctly, contains high-quality nutrients for cattle.

“Depending on what the producer’s goal is, with sorghum we have the ability to graze, hay or put it into silage,” Holman said. “It’s one of the advantages of sorghum, with all of the different sorghum types that are available. Once a producer identifies what his or her goal is, then we can select a sorghum type and variety to match the grower’s needs.”

Sorghum has better heat and drought tolerance than corn or alfalfa, and requires less irrigation than corn silage, Holman said.

“Particularly in the Ogallala Aquifer region, there are advantages of sorghum over corn when we are working with limited irrigation wells or dryland,” Holman said. “Sorghum has good drought tolerance and high water use efficiency.”

However, for producers who have adequate water, corn silage may suit their forage needs better than sorghum.

“If you are able to fully irrigate, you will obtain higher quality forage with corn silage due to its grain production, but if you are working with limited irrigation, sorghum silage is an excellent choice,” Holman said. “Sorghum grown under limited irrigation can produce more biomass, and by selecting the right variety, can produce good feed quality.”

Producers may view sorghum tonnage as the most important factor, he said, because they are paid on tons produced, like any biomass crop. But, feed quality is also important.

“When we evaluate feed quality, we measure components such as crude protein, fiber content, energy and digestibility of that forage,” Holman said. “There are several things to consider when it comes to feed quality.”
Sorghum types and their benefits

Brown midrib, or BMR, forage sorghum has been around for many years, but it has become more common in the last 5 to 10 years, Holman said.

“When you look at the midrib on the plant’s leaf, or if you cut open the stalk, it’s going to be brown in color versus white in color,” Holman said.

BMR sorghum can be useful to producers when it comes to lignin content. Lignin helps provide the plant rigidity, but it also reduces fiber digestibility and thus energy content in forages.

“The brown midrib trait has between 20 and 50 percent less lignin content,” Holman said. “Lignin is indigestible by the animal and protects plant fiber from being digested. So with reduced lignin, we have better fiber digestibility and, as a result, increased energy content in the forage.”

However, this isn’t always true.

“Not all BMRs meet that,” he said. “Some BMRs just don’t live up to what other BMRs can. Just because it is a BMR does not make it necessarily a good variety. Producers need to look at university performance test data and select a variety with good feed quality and yield potential.”

Photoperiod-sensitive (PPS) forage sorghum is another type of sorghum producers can consider utilizing.

“It remains vegetative until day length decreases to less than 12.5 hours a day,” Holman said. “So it remains vegetative long into the growing season.”

PPS forage sorghum does not produce seeds in Kansas, which extends the harvest window for hay production.

“It will not make seed or grain in our region, because we do not have a long enough growing season,” he said. “The advantage is it can produce high tonnage and gives a longer window of opportunity for haying in the fall, because it is not going to be maturing.”

But, PPS sorghum is not best for all types of production.

“(PPS) is not going to be a good choice as a silage crop, but it would be a good hay crop,” Holman said. “There are other crops that have better forage quality, but it can be a good hay choice.”

Sorghum-Sudan grass has been on the market a while and can be used for grazing, he said. It is typically grown when a producer is looking for grazing potential or, more recently, as a good fit for a cover crop.

“(Sorghum-Sudan grass varieties) have good regrowth potential and are a good fit for grazing,” Holman said. “Their feed quality drops off later in the season, whereas forage sorghums’ quality can stay quite high.”

Sorghum-Sudan grass varieties also fit a variety of difficult situations.

“They tend to be a little more drought tolerant and more tolerant of high pH soils than forage sorghum,” Holman said.
Continuing research

As with all crops, having a good nutrient management program is highly important.

Over-applying nitrogen can be hazardous, which has been shown in work Holman and others at K-State have done the last several years that examined nitrogen response with these sorghum crops.

“Sorghum requires a good nutrient management plan, not just for yield but to minimize the risk of high nitrate also,” Holman said. “Producers should soil sample and make sure all of the macronutrient needs are met. Make sure to not over-fertilize with nitrogen. Otherwise, we run the risk of elevating nitrate in the plant.”

K-State is adding a forage testing program for producers to aid them in their variety selection decision-making.

“Years ago, K-State had a forage variety testing program, but we are reinitiating it this year,” Holman said. “There isn’t a good university-wide testing program anywhere in our region, and we have producers asking for that information. We will have five sites across the state (Garden City, Hays, Hutchinson, Mound Valley and Scandia) where we will be evaluating both corn and sorghum silages, as well as sorghum and millet hay types. The success of this program is going to be based on the industry’s desire to enter varieties.”

“I would encourage producers and county agents to make sure that their seed supplier is entering the test, so they can see how varieties they are interested in compare to everyone else’s out there,” he added. “In addition, we’ve had a lot of cropping systems research projects that include forage sorghum over the last several years, because it is such an important crop for producers in the state.”

For more information about forage sorghum, visit your local extension office. Several research publications about forage sorghum are available online through the K-State Research and Extension Bookstore.

Butler falls to Ga. Highlands in overtime at NJCAA tournament

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 credit – Butler CC

The Butler men saw their season come to an end with an 88-86 overtime loss to Georgia Highlands in the first round of the NJCAA Tournament at the Sports Arena in Hutchinson.

The Grizzlies, who were the 14th seed in the tournament, finish the year at 29-4. Georgia Highlands was the 19th seed and advances to face No. 3 seed Southern Idaho in the Sweet 16 on Wednesday.

Butler trailed by seven in the first half, but got within a point at the break at 36-35 and then took the lead early in the second half after an offensive rebound and putback by Kyle Steward with 18:45 to go that made it 37-36.

Georgia Highlands led most of the game, but the two teams would trade the lead several times in the final five minutes. Lamar Wofford scored with 27.9 seconds left to tie the game and the Grizzlies held Georgia Highlands scoreless in the closing seconds to force overtime.

In the extra period, Butler would score first and then take an 81-76 lead after a 3-poiner by Kyle Steward with 3:39 left in the extra period. Butler would still lead by five after Jacolby Harris made 1-2 free throws with 2:41 to go.

Georgia Highlands would answer with back-to-back 3-pointers from Ty Toney to take an 85-84 lead with 1:44 left. Down by two, Butler would get a Lamar Wofford bucket to tie it 86-86 with 27.9 seconds to play.

The Butler defense locked down on Toney, but he passed off to teammate Donovan Harris, who was fouled with 2.1 seconds to play. He made both free throws. Butler got off a half-court shot as time expired, but did not draw rim.

Lamar Wofford led Butler with 23 points, while Kyle Steward had 18 and Chris Howell had 14. Steward had a double-double as he led the team in rebounds with 13. Wofford just missed a double-double with nine rebounds.

Butler was hurt by 25 turnovers, compared to 12 from Georgia Highlands. Both teams struggled at the free throw line with Butler going 24-37 (64.9 percent) and Georgia Highlands making 15-25 (60 percent). The Grizzlies were 30-64 from the floor (46.9 percent) but made just two of their eight 3-pointers.

The national tournament appearance is the sixth in school history for Butler, which won the national title in 1953 and reached the final four three times under coach Randy Smithson (1992, 1993, 1996). This is the second appearance under coach Mike Bargen (2010, 2015). The 29 wins is tied the fourth-highest win in program history. The Grizzlies have won 29 games in a season four times, the most recent being the 2010 team that went 29-7 and reached the national tournament.

BIG THREE PRODUCE BIG RESULTS IN NO. 1 HCC’S NJCAA TOURNAMENT VICTORY

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credit – Blue Dragon Sports | Hutchinson Community College

SALINA – Kalani Purcell, Clemence LeFebvre and Cynthia Petke combined to score 66 points to lift the No. 1-ranked Hutchinson Community College women’s basketball team to an 80-61 victory over South Georgia Tech on Tuesday in the second round of the 2015 NJCAA Division I Women’s Basketball National Tournament at the Bicentennial Center.