Showing 1-15 of 15 results
![cover image of Cover Crop Economics publication](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Cover-Crop-Economics-113x150.jpg)
Cover Crop Economics
Cover crops can build soil health, control weeds, conserve moisture, provide grazing opportunities and more. But when do they start to pay for themselves? This analysis looks at the economics behind different management scenarios to determine if cover crops are likely to improve profitability in one, three or five years of use in corn and soybean rotations.
![article on ten ways cover crops enhance soil health](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/10-ways-cover-crops-enhance-soil-health-119x150.jpg)
10 Ways Cover Crops Enhance Soil Health
Soil health is a hot topic these days, one that is justifiably receiving considerable attention from farmers and their farm advisors. This short fact sheet highlights some of the key ways that cover crops improve soil health by influencing the biological and physical characteristics of the soil.
![A field of flowering canola](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Canola-pic-LNE09-282-150x122.jpg)
Sustainable Production and Use of On-Farm Energy
Using solar or wind energy or producing biofuels from crop feedstocks and anaerobic digestion helps farmers achieve energy independence while improving profitability and reducing fossil fuel emissions.
![Cover crop interseeder](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Dave-Brandt.jpg)
Cover Crop Innovators Video Series
Find short video profiles of farmers around the country who are using cover crops on their land.
![Cover Crops for Soil Health Workshop Video](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Welcome-and-introductions-150x84.jpg)
Cover Crops for Soil Health Workshop
All session recordings and slide presentations from this three-day professional development workshop are available online. Hosted by Northeast SARE and Delaware State University in March 2016, this event addressed the latest research on the benefits and successful management of cover crops in grain, vegetable and animal production systems.
Cover Crop Cocktails
Mitch Hunter (Penn State University) discusses the principles of how to assemble different cover crop species into a successful cocktail based on farm management objectives, crop rotation restraints, and which cover crop species traits are complementary.
![Cover Page of Cover Crops for Sustainable Crop Rotations](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Cover_Crops_for_Sustainable_Crop_Rotations_Cover-119x150.jpg)
Cover Crops for Sustainable Crop Rotations
Cover crops are one of the best ways to improve soil health, reduce off-farm inputs and protect natural resources. Find a wealth of educational materials developed out of decades of SARE-funded cover crop research.
![Researcher and farmer holding a tillage radish](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/2013-RftF_15-150x100.jpg)
For Vegetable Farmers, a New No-Till Tool in Forage Radish
Vegetable farmers who want the myriad benefits of winter cover crops may be setting themselves up for a hectic spring schedule, when the challenge of planting during a narrow window of good weather becomes more complicated by the need to first terminate that winter crop. To make their lives a little easier, University of Maryland […]
Cover Crops Seed Selection and Planting
Whether you are new to cover crops or an advanced user, hear from two experts on how they chose and seed their cover crops.
![Cover of Cover Crops Webinar Series with the American Society of Agronomy logo below the title.](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/crop2-1-of-1-150x117.jpg)
Cover Crop Management and Termination
Planning for proper spring management of your cover crop needs to happen before April. Learn from two experts in the field on a couple different methods for termination.
![National Conference on Cover Crops and Soil Health logo](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/CC-Conf-logo-150x79.jpg)
2014 National Conference on Cover Crops and Soil Health
All session recordings and slide presentations from the National Conference on Cover Crops and Soil Health are available online. Held in 2014 in Omaha, Neb., the event brought together 300 agricultural leaders and innovators to explore how we can make American agriculture more sustainable through improved soil health. Attendees represented agricultural industry, the farm community, academia, government, commodity and conservation organizations.
![National Conference on Cover Crops and Soil Health logo](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/CC-Conf-logo-150x79.jpg)
Selecting Cover Crops
This session addressed the relative pros and cons of various cover crop species, including the less common cover crops and cover crops suited to grazing use.
![An uprooted radish plant on the ground, showing root and leaves](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Berns12-113x150.jpg)
Dryland Cover Cropping Boosts Yields
Every drop of water counts for farmers who practice dryland cultivation, a practice that relies on rainfall without the benefit of irrigation. So, when it comes to incorporating cover crops into a dryland rotation, many farmers hesitate, wondering: “How much moisture is the cover crop going to demand, and will I pay for it later […]
![Managing Cover Crops Profitably cover](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/MCCP3-122x150.jpg)
Managing Cover Crops Profitably, 3rd Edition
Managing Cover Crops Profitably explores how and why cover crops work and provides all the information needed to build cover crops into any farming operation.
![article on cover crops for all seasons](https://www.sare.org/wp-content/uploads/Cover-crops-for-all-seasons-117x150.jpg)
Cover Crops for All Seasons
This Virginia Association for Biological Farming information sheet provides research-based information on a cover crop “toolbox” from which growers can select cover crops most suited to their regions and production systems.