Beekeepers:
I have been reading about the benefits of crimson clover. Aside from producing 50 to 100 pounds of honey per acre (in a good year with adequate rain) it adds 50 to 60 pounds of nitrogen to the soil and a ton of material that can be integrated into the soil. It only takes five pounds of seed per acre at a cost of $1.50 per pound.
To get the land plowed and seeded in my area is a cost of about $40.00 per acre. That would bring the total cost with seed included to $47.50 per acre, call it fifty dollars per acre. There are farmers in my area that rest a portion of their tillable land each year. They usually plant wheat or oats to hold the soil. I don't know why they wouldn't be agreeable to planting crimson clover and getting the benefit of the nitrogen and mulch material put back into the soil. That being the case, would it be profitable to pay fifty bucks an acre for excellent honey forage that would produce 50 pounds of good quality clover honey? It would probably take at least 10 and probably 20 acres to make it worth while for a farmer to fool with.
Twenty acres would be a cost of a thousand bucks, but a harvest of 1,000 pounds of honey, (fifty pounds per acre) would be worth several times that amount. Of course, like all agricultural projects, it is a gamble on the weather, and the bees will make some honey with or without the clover. But, clover honey is much sought after and a valuable honey crop.
We beekeepers are always wanting someone to pay for our bees. This is in effect paying the farmer, but is it worth it to a beekeeper?
As an add-on, crimson clover is an early blooming plant.
lazy