Product List

A cross between winter rye and durum wheat resulting in excellent feed quality, high forage and grain yields.
Excellent winter hardiness.
Excellent response to higher levels of nitrogen.

Excellent as cover crop, green manure, forage or grain.
Winter rye can have an allelopathic affect on seedlings and weeds, mostly grasses, of the following crop.
Can be grazed late into the fall.

A brown chaffed variety that heads out several days earlier than Oberkulmer or Champ and 3 days earlier than Maverich.
Sungold is about the same height as Maverich.
Performs well throughout the Midwest.
Plant 100-180 lbs./ acre.

A winter annual legume suitable for cover crop, green manure, soil builder and excellent nitrogen source.
Comes to full bloom in early June/ July.

A high yielding purple pea for forage.
Excellent mixed with triticale, forage plus oats or brassicas.
100-125 lbs./ acre in mix.

A very high leaf-to-stem ration triticale that exhibits a very dense canopy of long leaves that suit itself to high forage production.
Excellent winter hardiness, high grain yields with excellent palatability.
Excellent response to nitrogen which makes it a great forage for livestock waste management.
Plant at 100-125 lbs./ acre.

Industry standard for many years.
Very versatile with many defensive agronomic traits.
Beardless with good tolerance to head scab, common and stripe rust.

The best of the forage peas, very aggressive growth.
Excellent mixed with Forage Plus Oats, 2700 Triticale. 100-125 lbs. mix/acre.
Excellent fall forage/winter storage when blended with oats, rye, radish, brassicas. 75-100 lbs. in mix/acre.

The king of forage oats.
Excellent for fall feed/forage when mixed with Arvika peas, Winfred brassica or graza radish.
80-95 lbs alone or 40-60 lbs in a mix/acre.


Turnip/kale cross. Multiple grazing; summer, fall or winter feed for all livestock types. Excellent regrowth.
Retains leaf and stem quality in frost and freeze conditions.

Excellent as cover crop, green manure, forage or grain.
Winter rye can have an allelopathic affect on seedlings and weeds, mostly grasses, of the following crop.
Can be grazed late into the fall.

Excellent as forage or as a “tillage” radish.
Excellent nitrogen scavenger, drought tolerance, rapid regrowth.
Excellent fall energy source when grazed.

Superior leaf and leaf holding ability.
Great flexibility for grazing.
Tankard bulb with high proportion above ground.

Excellent digestibility with high mineral content.
Fast establishment with excellent regrowth.
Helps reduce worms and parasites. Do not overgraze.
