It depends upon the companion plant, precipitation, and use. For pasture, tall fescue's seeded at the rate of 15-20 lbs/acre. For silage or hay, it's 6-8 lbs when the companion's alfalfa. It's 10-12 lbs when the companion's hay-style white or red clover, orchardgrass, or perennial ryegrass. And it's 12-15 lbs when the companion's barley or oats, or if there's no companion. Each rate's decreased by 30% if the seedbed's prepped for irrigated production. Each is increased by 50% if not.
THEY USE AN OPTIMUM SEEDING,RATE,PLANTING DATE,AND ROW SPACING
I dont think you can u can just turn down the upload rate.
Translation: "Average application rate shall not exceed 782,000 gallons per year per acre irrigated".
It depends on how much you want, but it is going to cost about $100 per acre unless you are looking at many acres when it could drop to $50-70 - price will vary from around $20 to less than $10 per pound depending on the order. You will need 15-20lb per acre.
When establishing a new stand of orchardgrass, it is usually best to seed in the early spring or late summer. Seed it at a rate of 8 to 12 pounds of seed per acre if using orchardgrass alone, or at a rate of 2 to 6 pounds per acre in combination with a single legume, such as alfalfa.
If your aplication rate is 300 lbs per acre of 13/13/13, you need 100 lbs of 13/13/13.
One kaccha bigha=1008 sq gauge =843 sq mt also, 1 ACRE = 4.800 KACHHA BIGHA
613. By the way, that's a really, really low yield for wheat. Less than 5 bushels per acre.
40
AED on a child
40
There are too many variables to answer this question. It depends on what population density a farmer wishes to plant based on a wide variety of field conditions and the number of seeds per pound. Farmers plant anywhere from 28,000 seeds per acre to as high as 40,000 seeds per acre, and seed counts can range from 1,250 seeds per pound to as high as 4,000 seeds per pound. This means a farmer might plant anywhere between 7 and 32 pounds of seed per acre. This is why US seed companies generally sell seed by the 80,000 seed count bag, even though the individual bag weight might vary greatly. Most farmers will get a little more than two acres planted from each bag.