Seed Product
Download a Planting Guide including lbs per acre chart by clicking here.

For Wholesale call: 802-385-1096

Per lbs.
25lbs
*50LBS
(Or as marked)
Arlington Red Clover (conventional/nonGMO)

Yields more than regular Medium Red and persists for 3 years of meadow. 85% stand after 3 years in U of MN tests. Ideal to seed with alfalfa in longer rotations. Seeded straight, is has produced 4 tons of hay per year for the first two years of pasture. High resistance to
Northern Anthractnose and powdery mildew. Early flowering variety.

Alsike Clover (conventional/nonGMO)

  • Flowers are pink and white.
  • Tillers profusely from the crown, with stems at least as long as Red clover
  • Mixes well with Timothy. the timothy keeps it from lodging over
  • Establishes well in poorly drined land
  • Lacks persistance, producing only two crops of hay before replanting is necessary.
Yellow Blossom Sweet Clover
Canadian Certified Organic

Biennial Clover for plowdown. Melilotus officinalis This cool-season biennial is good for mining insoluble minerals like potassium and phosphorus from the lower levels of the soil and bringing them to the surface. Its long tap root also helps loosen hard, packed soils. A vigorous grower, it will fix up to 125 pounds of nitrogen per acre and, *with adequate moisture, will grow to heights of 6 feet, providing tons of organic matter to your soil. Yellow Blossom Sweet Clover has demonstrated good drought tolerance, especially when planted early, just after your last frost. Sow 1 pound per 1000 square feet.

*In poor soils it will stay very short. You find it growing along road sides in the sand and gravel. It's a pioneer and can grow in a wide range of soils and climate conditions.

$4.00
$39.00
Regular Price $89.00

Fall Sale Price $69.00!
Organic BuckWheat (conventional/nonGMO)

An old time favorite summer, early fall and spring cover crop.
Plant after last frost. You can harvest the seed for grinding once mature in mi-July, or, cut down and till it in. Then you can replant. The next frost will do it in. The flowers attract bees and the dense foliage helps reduce weed growth. The best time to harvest is when it blossoms. The bees need a few days to work the flowers first. It will grow almost anywhere. Depending on soil fertility it can grow tall, short dense or thin, but, it generally always comes in.

If you grow a lot of it, you can make buckwheat flower and a nice pillow from the husks! Yeilds approx. 50-100lbs./acre

*Some bags are bushels. A bushel bag can be, depending on the grain, 48 - 60 pounds.
**When ordering more than 4 bushels/4 bags, call for price and shipping quote.

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Hull Less Oats (conventional/nonGMO)

  • Available in the Spring
  • Plant in early spring on well drained, fertile soil.
  • Can tolorate some acid and infertile soils conditions
  • Grown for grain, straw, pasture, hay, and silage.
  • Hull less oats are easier to digest than other varieties.
  • Seed at 2 bushels per acre. 32lbs./bushel.
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1 bag weighs 48lbs
1 bag is 1.5 bushels
Sold Out
Ladino Clover (conventional/nonGMO)

A giant version of white clover, smooth with a prostrate growth habit. When mature, it contains a high percentage of crude protein and amino acids (the building blocks of life). Best used as a pasture perennial as it does not dry well for hay or chop. Highly nutritious white clover used mainly for hog pasture. Fine, overshoe-height, high-yielding, and palatable. It recovers quickly after grazing.
Use with mixtures of alfalfa, red clover, timothy, or bromegrass.

Medium Red Clover (conventional, nonGMO)

An early flowering variety which produces two to three hay crops per year, and has biennial or short lived perennial growth habit.

White Clover/Dutch (Trifolium repens L) (conventional/nonGMO)

Perennial legume, best adapted to moist, fine textured soils and cool climates. Spreads by means of stolons. Shallow roots fix nitrogen in the soil, lessening the need for high nitrogen fertilizers. Can produce white pinkish flowers at a mowing height of only one inch. White clover is a perennial legume, which spreads by branching stolons. Like all other legumes it produces its own nitrogen. Recently, farm trials have shown these newer varieties release higher levels of nitrogen to the companion grass than older varieties. White clover is mainly used in grazing pastures for its high protein and energy value. Recent studies show an increased dry-matter intake of 2 pounds per cow per day when white clove is added to the grass. A good mixture of grass and white clover can yield as much as pure grass that receives 175 pounds of nitrogen per acre.

  • Works well in lawns.
  • Frost seed in early morning when frost is solid.
  • Establishment will be poor seeded any later when soil is slippery.
  • Seed 2 to 3 lbs. per acre in a mixture.
  • Seed early spring to August 10 depending on your climate.
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Winter Rye (conventional/nonGMO)
  • Winter rye is an old favorite.
  • You can grow it as a cover crop and use the grain.
  • Establishes in all types of soil conditions.
  • Plant in early fall after fields or gardens are harvested.
  • Can be frost seeded in early spring.(throw it on top of the snow!)
  • Plow or till under in the spring for soil building.
  • Grain is produced when it reaches maturity.
  • It usually dies back in the heat of summer.