Nebraska

Midwest Cover Crops Council (MCCC-136)

University of Nebraska Extension (G2351)

This publication is intended to provide a starting point for farmers who are new to growing cover crops. With experience, farmers may fine-tune the use of cover crops for their systems.

Introduction

This publication provides an introductory approach to integrating cover crops following corn silage and before corn or soybeans. These cover crops can have many benefits, such as erosion control, weed suppression, improved soil health, and quality forage production.

Planning and Preparation
  • Planning—Start planning early. Educate yourself by talking to experienced cover crop users, attending conferences and field days, and reading as much as possible about cover crops. Start small and determine your purpose and objectives for using cover crops. If needed, arrange for equipment, additional labor, or custom operators.
  • Corn hybrid and planting—Plant the corn silage crop early and use a hybrid within the adapted maturity range for your location. This will allow you to plant your cover crop earlier and increase fall growth.
  • Residual corn herbicides—Consult your agricultural supplier regarding residual corn herbicides that could cause concerns for newly planted cover crops. Cereal grains (rye, oats, and wheat) are not affected by most pre-emergence residual herbicides but are somewhat affected by post-emergence herbicides. If using rapeseed in your mix, it may be sensitive to carryover from herbicides. If cover crops will be grazed, additional herbicide restrictions may apply.
  • Seed purchase—Order your seed early from a reputable seed supplier to ensure a good germination rate, purity of seed, and that all seed has a seed analysis tag. Specific varieties of cereal rye, wheat, or oats may produce significantly more growth, but they are also more expensive than variety not stated (VNS) seed.
Fall Work
  • Corn silage harvest—Harvest fields where a cover crop is to be planted first, if possible.
  • Tillage or no-tillage—No-till drilling into corn silage stubble is usually the best strategy to use unless tillage is necessary to incorporate manure, fertilizer, or lime, or needed to smooth out the seedbed, such as deep wheel tracks after corn silage harvest. The tillage should be completed as soon as possible and before seeding the cover crop.
  • Timing of planting—Ideally, plant your cover crop as soon as possible after silage harvest. Plant the oats cover crop mix or oats alone by Sept. 7. Oats will not grow enough to justify their use after this date. For winter wheat only, plant before 50% frost date. For rye only, plant before two weeks after the 50% frost date. In northern Nebraska, this would be before Oct.15; in southern Nebraska, before Nov. 1. Use the Cover Crop Selector Tool (in the Resources section) for more precise dates for your county. These dates are guidelines; the sooner these cover crops are planted in the fall, the better.
  • Seeding rate for a mix—Drilled: oats, 20 lbs./acre; wheat, triticale, or rye, 25 lbs./acre; rapeseed, 1 lb./acre. Broadcast: oats, 25 lbs./acre; wheat, triticale, or rye, 30 lbs./acre; rapeseed, 2 lbs./acre.
  • Seeding rate for oats alone—Drilled: 30–40 lbs./acre; if grazed, 40–55 lbs./acre.
  • Seeding rate for wheat or rye alone—25–35 lbs./acre; if grazed, 45–60 lbs./acre. Shallow incorporation: oats, 45–60 lbs./acre; wheat, 50–65 lbs./acre; rye, 50–65 lbs./acre.
  • Planting method—If you include the brassica rapeseed, seeding depth is limited as these are small seeds. A depth of 0.50 inch is best. If you have a drill with two boxes, you can dribble the rapeseed on top of the ground and then drill your cereal grain to a depth of 0.75–1.50 inches.
Figure 1: An oat and brassica mix following corn silage can improve soil health, control erosion, provide weed suppression and produce forage for fall and into the winter (Mary Drewnoski)
Spring Work
  • Termination timing—Oats and rapeseed will usually winter-kill. Terminate the wheat, triticale, or cereal rye in the spring when plants are 6–12 inches tall and actively growing or about two weeks before planting corn or soybeans—whichever comes first. Many experienced growers will terminate wheat, triticale, or cereal rye the same day as planting corn or soybean, or within one week, particularly in irrigated situations. This provides an extra benefit for weed control. Risk of wheat stem maggot damage to corn seedlings increases when corn is planted into a green, non-terminated, winter cereal grain cover crop. Another concern is that cover crop residue with a high carbon-to-N (C:N) ratio can reduce soil-available N. Starter N fertilizer is recommended at planting or sidedress as soon as possible to offset this early immobilization when the corn has a high N demand. New cover crop users should terminate earlier when the cereal crops are smaller for corn. Planting green into soybeans is much less risky and could be implemented by new cover crop users.
  • Termination herbicide—Wheat, triticale, and cereal rye can typically be terminated with a full rate of glyphosate (1 lb. acid equivalent/acre) after these crops begin growing in the spring. Effectiveness and rapidity of termination improve if winter cereal grain grows rapidly and air temperatures are warmer.
  • Termination modifications for dry weather—Watch the weather and be ready to modify your termination plans. In a dry spring, cereal grain crops have the potential to use moisture that the cash crop will need, so terminate cover crops sooner to allow rainfall to make up the deficit.
  • Termination modifications for wet weather—In a wet spring, be ready to take advantage of any break in the weather and/or use low axle weight sprayers.
  • Option to harvest cereal rye, wheat, or triticale as a silage crop—A cereal grain cover crop planted in the fall and harvested at boot stage can provide a substantial amount of good quality forage. Waiting for the cereal grain cover crop to reach the boot stage (mid-May to early June) will delay planting of the next corn or soybean crop. If this crop is to be insured, then the small-grain cover crop should be terminated and corn or soybeans planted before the crop insurance late-planting deadline.
  • Corn or soybean planting—Almost all modern planters and drills are fully capable of planting corn or soybeans into a clean, small-grain cover crop. Planter adjustments are usually needed to ensure correct planting depth and seed furrow closure.
  • Scouting after planting—Scout for corn or soybean emergence, population, and insect pests (e.g., wheat stem maggot in corn). Scout for weeds because substantial small-grain residue, especially cereal rye, can delay emergence of annual weeds, which may then delay the need for and timing of applying post-emergence herbicides.
Figure 2: Many farmers grow cover crops following seed corn under irrigation. Cover crops usually are overseeded in mid- to late summer. This is an oat, radish, and turnip cover crop mix following seed corn (Mary Drewnoski)
Resources

Cover Crop Selector Tool —available from the Midwest Cover Crops Council, https://www.midwestcovercrops.org

Post Corn, Going to Soybean: Use Cereal Rye (Nebraska Cover Crop Recipe series, MCCC-107)

Post Corn Silage, Going to Corn: Use Cereal Rye (Iowa Cover Crop Recipe series, MCCC-121)

Post Corn Silage, Going to Soybean: Use Cereal Rye (Iowa Cover Crop Recipe series, MCCC-122)

Managing Residual Herbicides with Cover Crops (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

How Herbicide Labels Restrict Using Cover Crops as Forage (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

Corn and Soybean Herbicide Options for Planting Cover Crops for Forage in Fall (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

Residual Herbicides and Fall Cover Crop Establishment (Purdue Extension Weed Science publication)

Terminating Cover Crops: Successful Cover Crop Termination with Herbicides (Purdue Extension publication WS-50-W)

Authors

Gary Lesoing and Katja Koehler-Cole, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (Note: This publication was adapted with consent from MCCC under a joint project to produce customized introductory guidance about cover crops for all member states/provinces.)

Reviewers

Caro Córdova, Nathan Mueller, and Jennifer Rees, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Eileen Kladivko, Purdue University; Anna Morrow, Midwest Cover Crops Council

The Midwest Cover Crops Council (www.midwestcovercrops.org) aims to facilitate widespread adoption of cover crops throughout the Midwest by providing educational/outreach resources and programs, conducting new research, and communicating about cover crops to the public.

Funding for this project was provided by McKnight Foundation.

December 2022

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or a part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. ©2022 by MCCC. All rights reserved.

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Midwest Cover Crops Council (MCCC-137)

University of Nebraska Extension (G2352)

This publication is intended to provide a starting point for farmers who are new to growing cover crops. With experience, farmers may fine-tune the use of cover crops for their systems.

Introduction

This publication provides an introductory approach to integrating cover crops following wheat and before corn or soybeans. These cover crops can have many benefits, such as erosion control, improved soil health, weed suppression, and quality forage production.

Planning and Preparation
  • Planning—Start planning early. Educate yourself by talking to experienced cover crop users, attending conferences and field days, and reading as much as possible about cover crops. Start small and determine your purpose and objectives for using cover crops. If needed, arrange for equipment, additional labor, or custom operators.
  • Residual herbicides—Consult your agricultural supplier regarding residual wheat herbicides that could cause concerns for newly planted cover crops. If cover crops will be grazed, additional herbicide restrictions may apply.
  • Seed purchase—Order your seed early from a reputable seed supplier to ensure a good germination rate, purity of seed, and that all seed has a seed analysis tag.
Summer Work
  • Dryland vs. irrigation—Irrigation allows for flexibility in managing planting dates and provides some insurance against dry planting conditions. Dryland seedings should occur immediately following wheat harvest in July for warm- and cool-season mixes. If delayed until August, consider changing to a cool-season mix. Contact your local Extension personnel for more information.
  • Residue management—Uniform spreading of chaff and straw is essential during wheat harvest in order to avoid interfering with the cover crop seeding operation.
  • Nitrogen management—If growing a forage crop, a nitrogen application before seeding a cover crop may be beneficial to counteract tie-up caused by stubble. Consider taking soil samples after the wheat harvest to determine nitrate-nitrogen levels. Depending on the prior nitrogen management, wheat yield, and weather, some residual nitrogen should be accounted for. The addition of nitrogen (up to 50 lbs. N/acre) may be beneficial in increasing biomass production of many of the cover crops, e.g., forage sorghum, sorghum-sudangrass.
  • Wheat curl mite—Volunteer winter wheat and some species in diverse cover crop mixes planted after wheat (e.g., sorghums, millets, oats, barley) can serve as a host for wheat curl mites. These mites are vectors for the wheat streak mosaic virus complex. Planting new winter wheat fields within two miles of this existing field may lead to yield losses in winter wheat fields. Applying a burndown herbicide before planting the cover crop may be an option to control volunteer wheat and reduce competition from weeds. Please read the herbicide label and consult with an agricultural supplier or local Extension personnel for more information.
  • Planting cover crop—No-till drill into stubble at least 45–60 days before the 50% frost date for your area. For most of Nebraska, this mix will need to be planted before early September. Use the Cover Crop Selector Tool (in Resources section) for more precise dates for your county. For the highest cover crop productivity, seed immediately after wheat harvest. Seeding depth is limited by the brassica species in the mix (rapeseed) as these are small seeds. A depth of 0.50 inch is best.
  • Seeding rate—Oats are used in most diversified mixes because they are an excellent carrier for the other seeds. Seeding rates per acre are: 16–24 lbs. of oats, 4 lbs. of forage sorghum or sorghum-sudangrass, 2 lbs. of pearl millet, 1 lb. of grain sorghum, 1 lb. of rapeseed, and 4 lbs. of buckwheat.
Figure 1: This diversified cover crop mix seeded right after wheat harvest was able to catch a 2-in rain and got off to a good start (Gary Lesoing)
Spring Work
  • Winterkill—All species in the mixture will usually winter-kill with the onset of hard freezes, which will eliminate the need for any changes to spring management.
  • Cover crop termination—If you have something in the mix that overwinters or germinates and emerges in the spring, the general recommendation is to terminate the mixture approximately two weeks prior to planting the next cash crop. Termination can be achieved using a full rate of glyphosate.
Resources

Cover Crop Selector Tool —available from the Midwest Cover Crops Council, https://www.midwestcovercrops.org

Post Corn, Going to Soybean: Use Cereal Rye (Nebraska Cover Crop Recipe series, MCCC-107)

Post Corn Silage, Going to Corn: Use Cereal Rye (Iowa Cover Crop Recipe series, MCCC-121)

Post Corn Silage, Going to Soybean: Use Cereal Rye (Iowa Cover Crop Recipe series, MCCC-122)

Managing Residual Herbicides with Cover Crops (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

How Herbicide Labels Restrict Using Cover Crops as Forage (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

Corn and Soybean Herbicide Options for Planting Cover Crops for Forage in Fall (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

Residual Herbicides and Fall Cover Crop Establishment (Purdue Extension Weed Science publication)

Terminating Cover Crops: Successful Cover Crop Termination with Herbicides (Purdue Extension publication WS-50-W)

Wheat Stem Maggot Adult Monitoring: A Pest of Cover Crop-to-Corn Transitions (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

Research Update on Cover Crops after Winter Wheat Harvest (Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska)

Authors

Gary Lesoing and Katja Koehler-Cole, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (Note: This publication was adapted with consent from MCCC under a joint project to produce customized introductory guidance about cover crops for all member states/provinces.)

Reviewers

Caro Córdova, Nathan Mueller, and Jennifer Rees, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Eileen Kladivko, Purdue University; Anna Morrow, Midwest Cover Crop Council

The Midwest Cover Crops Council (www.midwestcovercrops.org) aims to facilitate widespread adoption of cover crops throughout the Midwest by providing educational/outreach resources and programs, conducting new research, and communicating about cover crops to the public.

Funding for this project was provided by McKnight Foundation.

December 2022

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or a part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. ©2022 by MCCC. All rights reserved.

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Midwest Cover Crops Council (MCCC-107)
University of Nebraska Extension (G2314)


This publication is intended to provide a starting point for farmers who are new to growing cover crops. With experience, farmers may fine-tune the use of cover crops for their systems.

Introduction

The following recipe provides an introductory approach to integrating a cover crop into a corn-soybean rotation. Planting a cover crop ahead of a soybean cash crop is often the easiest way to introduce cover crops into your rotation. Farmers who plan to grow wheat in a crop rotation should use cereal rye with caution. Cereal rye cannot be grown or used as a cover crop on fields where certified wheat will be grown in the next five years.

Planning and Preparation
  • Planning—Educate yourself. Learn the pros and cons of cover crops through reading, attending field days and conferences, and talking with farmers who have used cover crops successfully. Start small. Be timely. Prioritize management based on your goal for using cover crops.
  • Corn hybrid and planting—If possible, plant the preceding corn crop early and use an early maturity corn hybrid. One strategy is to use cover crops on the field you usually harvest first, on sloping ground, or on a field where you can watch it regularly, and to plant your earliest maturity hybrid on that field.
  • Residual corn herbicides—Cereal rye can be seeded and a successful stand will occur in the fall following most of the spring-applied residuals used in corn. However, if cereal rye will be grazed or fed to livestock, there are some restrictions (see Resources section).
  • Seed purchase—Order cereal rye seed early. Named varieties can produce substantially more growth or more predictable growth and maturity, but they are more expensive than VNS (variety not stated) seed. Unless you are considering grazing or using the cereal rye as a harvested forage, start with VNS seed with a good germination rate purchased from a reputable seed dealer. Note that this means the seed has been cleaned, tested for germination, and has a seed tag even though it is VNS.
Fall Work
  • Corn harvest—Harvest fields where cereal rye is to be planted as early as possible.
  • Tillage or no-tillage—To allow for adequate cover crop growth, it is best or easier if no full-width tillage is planned for after rye planting or before intended rye termination date. Thus, it is easier to integrate cover crops into no-till or strip-till systems.
  • Timing of planting—Ideally, plant cereal rye as soon after harvest as possible and before two weeks after the 50% frost date. In northern Nebraska, this would be before Oct. 15; in southern Nebraska, before Nov. 1. Use the Selector Tool (in Resources section) for more precise dates for your county. These dates are guidelines; the sooner cereal rye is planted in the fall, the better, but later-planted cereal rye can also be successful.
  • Seeding rate—Drilled seeding rate: 45–60 lbs./acre. Broadcast with shallow incorporation: 50–65 lbs./acre. These rates are based on high-quality seed with germination rates of 85–98%.
  • Planting method—Drill to 0.75–1.50 inches deep or broadcast with shallow incorporation. An air-seeder mounted on a vertical tillage tool can also be used.
  • Fertility or liming—If applying P, K, or lime, complete the application prior to the seeding operation or apply to the growing rye before the ground freezes. If it is necessary to inject manure, low-disturbance injectors are available that will cause minimal damage to the cereal rye. Surface application of liquid manure on top of the rye is not recommended. Surface broadcast of dry manure or litter should be done prior to seeding, but 4 tons or less can be applied to growing cereal rye with minimal damage by using modern spreading equipment that provides even distribution.
Spring Work
  • Scouting—In the spring, scout your cereal rye cover crop to determine how well it is growing and its coverage. But if rainfall is below normal, scout also to monitor soil moisture in case earlier termination is needed for the germination and growth of the desired row crop.
  • Termination timing—Terminate the cereal rye in the spring when plants are 6 to 12 inches tall and actively growing or about two weeks before planting soybean—whichever comes first. Many growers will successfully plant soybean into terminated cereal rye much taller than 12 inches, especially if weed control is a primary purpose, but new cover crop users should terminate when the cereal rye is smaller (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. Terminate cereal rye growth when approximately 6–12 inches in height (shown here). (Gary Lesoing)
Figure 1. Terminate cereal rye growth when approximately 6–12 inches in height (shown here). (Gary Lesoing)
  • Termination herbicide—Cereal rye can easily be terminated with a full rate of glyphosate (minimum of 1 lb. acid equivalent [ae]/acre) after dormancy breaks in the spring. Be aware that there can be termination issues when urea-ammonium nitrate (UAN) liquid fertilizer is used as a carrier for the herbicide. Effectiveness and rapidity of termination improves if rye is rapidly growing and air temperatures are warmer. Larger rye, rye past the boot stage, or rye sprayed during cooler weather can be more difficult to kill or will die more slowly.
  • Termination modifications for dry weather—Watch the weather and be ready to modify your termination plans. In a dry spring, the cereal rye cover crop has the potential to use moisture that the cash crop will need, so terminate cover crops sooner to allow rainfall to make up the deficit.
  • Termination modifications for wet weather—In a wet spring, when it has been very difficult to get into the fields to spray, be ready to take advantage of any break in the weather and/or use low axle weight sprayers. If projected soybean planting is less than 10 days away and the rye is tall, then it often works better to spray within a day or two of planting.
  • Soybean planting—It is usually best to no-till plant soybean into the dead/dry or standing cereal rye cover crop. Almost all modern planters and drills are fully capable of planting soybean into a cereal rye cover crop. Check planting depth and seed furrow closure shortly after beginning to plant into the cover crop residue as usually some adjustments are needed.
  • Scouting—After soybean planting, scout for soybean emergence and population. Additionally, scout for weeds since substantial cereal rye residue can often delay emergence of annual weeds, which may delay the application of post-emergence herbicides.
Resources

Cover Crop Selector Tool —available from the Midwest Cover Crops Council,

Managing Cover Crops: An Introduction to Integrating Cover Crops into a Corn-Soybean Rotation (Purdue Extension publication AY-353-W)

Residual Herbicides and Fall Cover Crop Establishment (Purdue Extension Weed Science publication)

How Herbicide Labels Restrict Using Cover Crops as Forage

Corn and Soybean Herbicide Options for Planting Cover Crops for Forage in Fall

Terminating Cover Crops: Successful Cover Crop Termination with Herbicides (Purdue Extension publication WS-50-W)

Authors

Gary Lesoing, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, and Katja Koehler-Cole, University of Nebraska–Lincoln (Note: This publication was adapted with consent from MCCC under a joint project to produce customized introductory guidance about cover crops for all member states/provinces.)

Reviewers and Contributors

Cory Brubaker, USDA-NRCS; Keith Glewen, University of Nebraska; Eileen Kladivko, Purdue University; Anna Morrow, Midwest Cover Crop Council; Nathan Mueller, University of Nebraska; Jody Saathoff, CHS, Inc., Minden, NE

The Midwest Cover Crops Council (www.https://www.midwestcovercrops.org) aims to facilitate widespread adoption of cover crops throughout the Midwest by providing educational/outreach resources and programs, conducting new research, and communicating about cover crops to the public.
Funding for this project was provided by McKnight Foundation.

October 2019

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or a part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. ©2019 by MCCC. All rights reserved.

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Midwest Cover Crops Council (MCCC-108)
University of Nebraska Extension (G2315)


This publication is intended to provide a starting point for farmers who are new to growing cover crops. With experience, farmers may fine-tune the use of cover crops for their systems.

Introduction

The following recipe provides an introductory approach to integrating a cover crop into a soybean-corn rotation. Often the easiest place to begin is to plant a cover crop ahead of a soybean cash crop following corn, so consider starting with the companion recipe titled Post Corn, Going to Soybean (publication MCCC-107; see Resources).

Planning and Preparation
  • Planning—Educate yourself. Learn the pros and cons of cover crops through reading, attending field days and conferences, and talking with farmers who have used cover crops successfully. Start small. Be timely. Prioritize management based on your goal for using cover crops.
  • Soybean variety and planting—If possible, plant the preceding soybean crop early and use an early maturity soybean cultivar. One strategy is to use your earliest-maturity-group soybeans on the fields where you plan to seed cover crops and plant those beans first.
  • Residual soybean herbicides—Because oats/wheat are very tolerant of most soybean residual herbicides, few restrictions apply unless grazing is being considered. Rapeseed planted in this cover crop mix may be affected by residual soybean herbicides. Chlorimuron (Classic®, Canopy®, Cloak®, etc.), imazethapyr (Pursuit®), and fomesafen (Reflex®, etc.) could be a problem for fall-seeded legume or mustard covers.
  • Seed purchase—Order cover crop seed early. Named oat and rapeseed varieties grow well but are more expensive than VNS (variety not stated) seed. Start with VNS seed with a good germination rate that has been cleaned, tested for germination, and has a seed tag even though it is VNS. North of Highway 30 or if not seeding by September 15, use winter wheat only as oats will not grow enough to justify its use in the mix. Use certified, nontreated seed wheat varieties to reduce cost. Most wheat varieties have adequate winter hardiness for Nebraska for cover crop purposes.
Fall Work
  • Soybean harvest—Harvest fields where the cover crop mix is to be planted as early as possible.
  • Timing of planting—Plant the cover crop mix immediately after harvest (by the third week in September for most of Nebraska). For wheat only, plant before two weeks after the 50% frost date. Use the Selector Tool (in Resources section) for more precise dates for your county.
  • Planting method—Drill to a depth of 0.75–1.50 inches or broadcast. Incorporation of the seed, if any, should be light since excessive disturbance of soybean stubble may negate any benefit of the cover crop. See Resources for more details on seeding methods. All seeding rates are based on seed with germination rates of 85–98%.
  • Seeding rate for a mix—Drilled: oats, 20 lbs./acre; wheat, 25 lbs./acre; rapeseed 1 lb./acre. Broadcast: oats, 25 lbs./acre; wheat, 35 lbs./acre; rapeseed 2 lbs./acre.
  • Seeding rate for wheat alone—Drilled: 45–60 lbs./acre. Broadcast with shallow incorporation: 50–65 lbs./acre.
  • Aerial seeding or overseeding—An alternative to seeding after harvest is to do aerial seeding with a plane or helicopter or overseeding with a ground-based vehicle. In most of Nebraska, seeding should take place in late August or by the first week of September and before 25% of the soybean leaves have yellowed and dropped. Rainfall after seeding is essential for establishment.
  • Seeding rate for overseeding—For a mix: oats, 20 lbs./acre; wheat, 30 lbs./acre; rapeseed, 3 lbs./acre. For wheat alone: 50 lbs./acre.
  • Tillage or no-tillage—To allow for adequate cover crop growth, it is best if no full-width tillage takes place until spring in order to maintain surface cover to prevent erosion.
  • Fertility or liming—If applying P, K, or lime, complete the application prior to the seeding operation or apply to the growing oats/wheat/rapeseed before the ground freezes. If it is necessary to inject N fertilizer or manure in the fall, a low-disturbance applicator should be used to minimize reduction in surface residues.
Figure 1. Here, corn is being planted into recently terminated winter wheat that is 6 to 8 inches tall. (Nathan Mueller)
Figure 1. Here, corn is being planted into recently terminated winter wheat that is 6 to 8 inches tall. (Nathan Mueller)
Spring Work
  • Starter fertilizer—Strongly consider equipping your corn planter with 2×2 starter fertilizer, and aim for a starter fertilizer rate between 30–50 pounds of actual N per acre.
  • Termination timing—Terminate the wheat in the spring when plants are 6 to 12 inches tall and actively growing or about two weeks before planting corn—whichever comes first. Many growers will successfully plant corn into terminated wheat taller than 12 inches, especially if weed control is a primary purpose, but new cover crop users should terminate when the wheat is smaller.
  • Termination herbicide—Wheat can be terminated with a full rate of glyphosate (minimum of 1 lb. acid equivalent [ae] per acre) after dormancy breaks in the spring. Effectiveness and rapidity of termination improves if wheat is rapidly growing and air temperatures are warmer. Larger wheat, wheat past the boot stage, or wheat sprayed during cooler weather can be more difficult to kill. Be careful of atrazine and atrazine premixes antagonizing glyphosate if weather is cool and cloudy near the application date.
  • Termination modifications for dry weather—Watch the weather and be ready to modify your termination plans. In a dry spring, wheat has the potential to use moisture that the cash crop will need, so terminate cover crops sooner to allow rainfall to make up the deficit.
  • Termination modifications for wet weather—In a wet spring, be ready to take advantage of any break in the weather and/or use low axle weight sprayers. If projected corn planting is less than 10 days away and the wheat is tall, then it often works better to spray within a day or two of planting.
Resources

Cover Crop Selector Tool —available from the Midwest Cover Crops Council

Post Corn, Going to Soybean: Use Cereal Rye (Nebraska Cover Crop Recipe series, MCCC-107)—available from the Midwest Cover Crops Council

Cover Crop Options after Corn or Soybean Harvest

Managing Cover Crops: An Introduction to Integrating Cover Crops into a Corn-Soybean Rotation (Purdue Extension publication AY-353-W)

Residual Herbicides and Fall Cover Crop Establishment (Purdue Extension Weed Science publication)

How Herbicide Labels Restrict Using Cover Crops as Forage

Corn and Soybean Herbicide Options for Planting Cover Crops for Forage in Fall

Terminating Cover Crops: Successful Cover Crop Termination with Herbicides (Purdue Extension publication WS-50-W)

Authors

Gary Lesoing, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, and Katja Koehler-Cole, University of Nebraska–Lincoln (Note: This publication was adapted with consent from MCCC under a joint project to produce customized introductory guidance about cover crops for all member states/provinces.)

Reviewers and Contributors

Cory Brubaker, USDA-NRCS; Keith Glewen, University of Nebraska; Eileen Kladivko, Purdue University; Anna Morrow, Midwest Cover Crop Council; Nathan Mueller, University of Nebraska; Jody Saathoff, CHS, Inc., Minden, NE

The Midwest Cover Crops Council (www.https://www.midwestcovercrops.org) aims to facilitate widespread adoption of cover crops throughout the Midwest by providing educational/outreach resources and programs, conducting new research, and communicating about cover crops to the public.
Funding for this project was provided by McKnight Foundation.

October 2019

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or a part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. ©2019 by MCCC. All rights reserved.

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