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Why do Oregon farms plant red clover every spring? (a.wholelottanothing.org)
thisisauserid 20 hours ago [-]
To provide free nitrogen fertilizer pulled from the air.
aaron695 19 hours ago [-]
[dead]
skyberrys 18 hours ago [-]
That is a really exciting answer for the red clover, but I have more questions. Why are the farms in oregon doing this? Can farms in any geographic area plant red clover? Why are the flowers red but the leaves green? Do I have a similar red clover growing in my yard, that is just red clover leaves with small purple flowers?
altairprime 17 hours ago [-]
The article says why; technically, no, Alaska considers it mildly invasive, and it suffers at -40F and won’t bloom until +60F. https://plants.sc.egov.usda.gov/plant-profile/TRPR2
skyberrys 13 hours ago [-]
Thanks, I looked up the other plant I was thinking of and it's called purple shamrock, it does not provide nitrogen fixing. It looks like the red clover is pretty widely grown across the US from your link.
rmosolgo 16 hours ago [-]
*crimson clover (by the looks of it)
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