wngsprd
Super Member
Glad to read you are planting for the bees. A while after the first time I planted a field of buckwheat, I heard a sort of roar from the direction of the field when I was walking nearby. I walked closer only to learn it was the hum of thousands of bees on the flowers.
I grow it every year, and don't cover the seeds. If I've tilled, then I drive the tractor over the plot (over and over again, paralleling my tread marks) since I can't find a reasonably priced cultipacker either. My R4s press the seeds into the soil, and make a kind of imprint not unlike what a cultipacker is doing. It takes a while, but can do it at a higher speed, and the germination rate makes it worth it. Once they've gone to seed, I sometimes bush hog them, and get a very nice second crop by just letting them germinate loose on the ground.
I do the same with my clover plots.
I only drag over the bigger seeds, like pure sunflower, or my soybeans/cowpeas/sorghum/sunflower/buckwheat mix.
Good luck.
I grow it every year, and don't cover the seeds. If I've tilled, then I drive the tractor over the plot (over and over again, paralleling my tread marks) since I can't find a reasonably priced cultipacker either. My R4s press the seeds into the soil, and make a kind of imprint not unlike what a cultipacker is doing. It takes a while, but can do it at a higher speed, and the germination rate makes it worth it. Once they've gone to seed, I sometimes bush hog them, and get a very nice second crop by just letting them germinate loose on the ground.
I do the same with my clover plots.
I only drag over the bigger seeds, like pure sunflower, or my soybeans/cowpeas/sorghum/sunflower/buckwheat mix.
Good luck.