Most farmers know the summer slump: pastures slow down, hay gets expensive, and nutrition drops when animals need it most. But there’s a warm-season forage that’s changing how small and mid-scale grazing farms handle that gap.
Sunn hemp grows 4–6 tons of biomass in 60–90 days, fixes its own nitrogen, and holds protein in heat that burns clover out. Managed right, it can stretch hay, reduce grain dependence, and rebuild soil at the same time.
Credit to : Regenerative Farmers of America
