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Eisley gazing over the incoming waves from the Gulf.

Taproot of sainfoin planted as part of perennial mix for monoculture conversion from crested wheatgrass. Sterling Ballbach chose to participate in the North Stillwater County Pasture Monoculture Diversification Targeted Implementation Plan, developed by the NRCS field office in Columbus based on local priorities. The purpose of the TIP is to renovate the monoculture pastures to a diverse mix of plants that allows for different season of use on these pastures. This option facilitates a grazing plan with more management options that helps to improve the health of native rangeland units. Ballbach property, Stillwater County, MT. July 2021

 

Native, cool-season, perennial,

loosely tufted grass to 1 m tall. A minor component in pastures, it grows on most

soil types and is drought and frost tolerant. A variable species; plants on good soils produce high quality, palatable green feed in the cooler months, but plants on shallower soils tend to have harsher leaves and produce little feed. Generally only a short lived plant, but can recruit well from seed if needed.

Native, cool-season, perennial,

loosely tufted grass to 1 m tall. A minor component in pastures, it grows on most

soil types and is drought and frost tolerant. A variable species; plants on good soils produce high quality, palatable green feed in the cooler months, but plants on shallower soils tend to have harsher leaves and produce little feed. Generally only a short lived plant, but can recruit well from seed if needed.

growing, algae, duckweed, bioreaction, clarification, hydroponic fertilizer, organic, fertilizer, deep water culture, raft, zooplankton,

growing, algae, duckweed, bioreaction, clarification, hydroponic fertilizer, organic, fertilizer, deep water culture, raft, zooplankton, bioponica, algosolar, trough, pipes, vertical farming, sustainable, bioreactor, biofilter, clarifier, aquaculture, tilapia, guppies, crawfish, barramundi, red claw, spirulina, ebb and flow, deep water, nft, aquaponics, hydroponics, organic, fodder, fish feed,

Stipa comata var. comata, needle and thread grass, is abundant around and on top of the Chalk Buttes southwest of Ekalaka, Montana. It co-dominates open arid grasslands along with thickspike wheatgrass, bluebunch wheatgrass, little bluestem, prairie sand reed, and prairie Junegrass. The grass communities in the open understory of the Chalk Buttes are in good condition in terms of high native plant diversity and low exotic plant diversity.

The lemmas and glume awns are relatively short and the spike is held erect compared to those of Hordeum jubatum (foxtail barley).

Brentano Pattern Dahlia 8200-05 Wheatgrass in the lobby of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel

 

www.brentanofabrics.com/fabrics/details.aspx?fabID=8200-05

The terminal spikes of quackgrass in the foreground contrast to the open panicles of smooth brome in the background. This site lies along East Kagy Blvd where it intersects Spring Creek, south Bozeman, Montana.

Native, cool-season, perennial,

loosely tufted grass to 1 m tall. A minor component in pastures, it grows on most soil types and is drought and frost tolerant. A variable species; plants on good soils produce high quality, palatable green feed in the cooler months, but plants on shallower soils tend to have harsher leaves and produce little feed. Generally only a short lived plant, but can recruit well from seed if needed.

Helianthus annuus in late fall condition inhabiting a heavily disturbed roadside (often graded, sprayed with herbicide, and traveled by pedestrians and dogs) along with Panicum capillare and crested wheatgrass. The grasses off to the side of the road comprise mostly Bromus inermis, Dactylis glomerata, and some Agropyron smithii.

The sagebrush steppe on top of Blue Mountain Pass includes a diversity and abundance of native bunchgrasses. However, cheatgrass was fairly abundant everywhere regardess of disturbance and burn history.

The rhizomatous Intermediate wheatgrass dominates the roadside and to some degree the adjacent sagebrush steppe in an area where it seems Bromus tectorum should be more common than it is. Agropyron cristatum, crested wheatgrass (with the shorter squater terminal spikes), codominates in this area.

Where the sagebrush steppe in this area has been degraded by use as pasture, exotic grasses such as Poa bulbosa, Agropyron cristatum, Agropyron intermedium, and Agropyron trachycaulum are common but Bromus tectorum is not, even though it is along the adjacent roadsides.

At the upper elevations along the Trail Creek Road, the mountain big sagebrush steppe is dominated by Festuca idahoensis, Koeleria macrantha, and Agropyron spicatum and secondarily by Poa secunda. Bromus tectorum is absent from this vegetation and rare along the roadsides.

growing, algae, duckweed, bioreaction, clarification, hydroponic fertilizer, organic, fertilizer, deep water culture, raft, zooplankton, bioponica, algosolar, trough, pipes, vertical farming, sustainable, bioreactor, biofilter, clarifier, aquaculture, tilapia, guppies, crawfish, barramundi, red claw, spirulina, ebb and flow, deep water, nft, aquaponics, hydroponics, organic, fodder, fish feed,

Stop. It’s smoothie time! Grab the recipe for this Pineapple Smoothie in our bio link.

 

wheatgrass.com/recipe/pineapple-smoothie/

 

Tags: #pines #pineswheatgrass #wheatgrass #superfood #healthy #health #healthyfood #healthylife #healthyliving #healthyeats #healthychoices #healthybody #healthydiet #healthyeating #nutrition #greens #eatyourveggies #berealeatreal #eatclean #smoothie #recipe #recipes #flashesofdelight #abmhappylife #wellness #instagood #dreambig

The left-hand specimen belongs to Agropyron intermedium var. trichophorum, pubescent wheatgrass. The right-hand specimen is of Agropyron repens, quackgrass. These two co-occu in the Peets Hill area of Burke Park, Bozeman, Montana. Agropyron repens has glumes with an acuminate apex and awn-tipped lemmas. Agropyron intermedium has glumes with a blunt (notched) apex and round-tipped lemmas. The hairy lemmas of this specimen of Agropyron intermedium suggest it could be pubescent wheatgrass, Agropyron intermedium var. trichophorum. These inflorescences come from intermediate wheatgrass and quackgrass growing along the ridgeline at the north end of Burke Park, Bozeman, Gallatin County, Montana.

cats do like a bit of salad now and again, and cat grass is surprisingly easy to grow…

Six row barley has the thicker and darker inflorescences and is growing along the margins of a field of two row barley. This barley represents populations that have escaped from the adjacent crop fields of the Museum of the Rockies and established along South 7th Street, Bozeman, Montana.

The open grass-dominated vegetation, burned and unburned, in the Jarbidge Mountains is dominated by mountain brome (Bromus carinatus), Idaho fescue (Festuca idahoensis), slender wheatgrass (Agropyron trachycaulum), Columbia needlegrass (Stipa nelsonii), and scattered patches of basin wildrye (Elymus cinereus) and the introduced Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis). Native shrub diversity includes mountain big sagebrush Artemisia tridentata vaseyana), green rabbitbrush (Chrysothamnus viscidiflorus), mountain snowberry (Symphoricarpos oreophilus), serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia), and horsebrush (Tetradymia canescens). Native forb diversity includes showy fleabane (Erigeron speciosus), tapertip hawksbeard (Crepis acuminata), arrowleaf balsamroot (Balsamorhiza sagittata), mule-ears (Wyethia amplexicaulis), oneflower helianthella (Helianthella uniflora), parsnipflower buckwheat (Eriogonum heracleoides), and Jessica sticktight (Hackelia micrantha). The abundance and diversity of native plants at all elevations in this region, which is off-limits to livestock grazing, provides yet another example of how excluding grazing by cows and sheep does not result in the development of a monoculture of something like crested wheatgrass (which occurs in this area but is not abundant).

Much of what passes as Montana steppe (prairie) actually comprises mostly few grass species that withstand long histories of overstocking, such as Agropyron cristatum (crested wheatgrass), Agropyron dasystachyum (thickspike wheatgrass), and Stipa comata (needle and thread grass).

Intermediate wheatgrass can form diffuse rhizomatous stands or the stems can be bunched with not many rhizomes. This supposedly distinguished Agropyron intermedium from Agropyron elongatum, but the covariation of such growth habit and other diagnostic traits is not evident. The ends of the spectrum of this growth habit are continuous. This site lies along the Highland Glen trail system near East Kagy Blvd, Bozeman, Gallatin County, Montana.

Taproot of sainfoin planted as part of perennial mix for monoculture conversion from crested wheatgrass. Sterling Ballbach chose to participate in the North Stillwater County Pasture Monoculture Diversification Targeted Implementation Plan, developed by the NRCS field office in Columbus based on local priorities. The purpose of the TIP is to renovate the monoculture pastures to a diverse mix of plants that allows for different season of use on these pastures. This option facilitates a grazing plan with more management options that helps to improve the health of native rangeland units. Ballbach property, Stillwater County, MT. July 2021

 

The mountain big sagebrush steppe in this area can sometimes be very short statured and expansive (similar to wyoming big sagebrush steppe). Although Bromus tectorum can be abundant along the road, this annual exotic rarely if ever is found out in the sagebrush steppe of this area.

The sagebrush steppe on top of Blue Mountain Pass includes a diversity and abundance of native bunchgrasses. However, cheatgrass was fairly abundant everywhere regardess of disturbance and burn history.

they love wheatgrass! yum!

The lemmas and glume awns are relatively short and the spike is held erect compared to those of Hordeum jubatum (foxtail barley).

The sagebrush steppe in this region of southeast Oregon is sporadically prone to colonization by Bromus tectorum in high abundance. In sites such as these where crested wheatgrass and Sandberg's bluegrass are abundant, cheatgrass is essentially non-existent.

Sagebrush steppe not burned during the Long Draw fire included an area on the north slope of Blue Mountain Pass along highway 95, which was dominated by crested wheatgrass and essentially devoid of cheatgrass.

Much of what passes as Montana steppe (prairie) actually comprises mostly few grass species that withstand long histories of overstocking, such as Agropyron cristatum (crested wheatgrass), Agropyron dasystachyum (thickspike wheatgrass), and Stipa comata (needle and thread grass). Agropyron cristatum dominates the foreground and Stipa comata is responsible for the light coloration of the background (the drying leaf sheaths unfold and turn light straw colored).

Oyster, Melon, Wheatgrass

 

Atelier Crenn

San Francisco, California

(August 1, 2012)

 

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growing, algae, duckweed, bioreaction, clarification, hydroponic fertilizer, organic, fertilizer, deep water culture, raft, zooplankton, bioponica, algosolar, trough, pipes, vertical farming, sustainable, bioreactor, biofilter, clarifier, aquaculture, tilapia, guppies, crawfish, barramundi, red claw, spirulina, ebb and flow, deep water, nft, aquaponics, hydroponics, organic, fodder, fish feed,

wheatgrass makes a fun display

The stuff coming out of the right of the machine looks like carpet. The juice comes out the other side, and looks a little more appealing

Autosave-File vom d-lab2/3 der AgfaPhoto GmbH

He's too fast! It's like everything's being fast-forwarded. o.O

 

More of the wheatgrass Debbie graciously brought.

 

Pie's not in the video because she's busy somewhere else. There's another video where she's in too, but she was not really doing anything in particular. Whoops.

 

These two little robos are chunky now. Big round bums. :P

 

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The state grass of South Dakota is incredibly valuable to the livestock industry in our state due to its prominence on many ecological sites as well its ability to retain valuable protein and energy content even when dormant, making it a preferred forage for grazing animals even in winter.

 

Photo taken by Tanse Herrmann, SD NRCS District Conservationist, Thursday, October 22 while certifying Conservation Stewardship Program practice & enhancement adoption in Meade County north of New Underwood.

Prairie junegrass is front and center, bluebunch wheatgrass is at left, and Idaho fescue is to the right. Agropyron spicatum is the most loosely bunched, whereas Festuca idahoensis is the most tightly bunched of these three "palouse prairie" grasses. This site lies at the base of the south face of the College M slope, south end of the Bridger Range, Gallatin County, Montana.

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