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- Vicia sativa - Wikipedia
Vicia sativa, known as the common vetch, garden vetch, tare or simply vetch, is a nitrogen-fixing leguminous plant in the family Fabaceae It is now naturalised throughout the world occurring on every continent, except Antarctica and the Arctic [3]
- American Vetch Plant Fact Sheet - USDA Plants Database
American vetch is a native, perennial, climbing vine that grows approximately 1 to 2 feet tall Each plant has a single stem Tendrils emerge from the end of the multiple leaflets to help secure the plant to the climbing structure
- Vetch | Legume, Nitrogen Fixation Cover Crop | Britannica
vetch, (genus Vicia), genus of about 140 species of herbaceous plants in the pea family (Fabaceae) The fava bean (Vicia faba) is an important food crop, and several other species of vetch are cultivated as fodder and cover crops and as green manure
- How to Plant and Grow Hairy Vetch - Better Homes Gardens
Hairy vetch is one of the easiest cover crops to grow and imparts some of the greatest benefits for the soil It can be planted in USDA Zones 4-10 and in Zone 3 with protection from the cold
- Plant Vetch as a Cover Crop | American Meadows
Vetch produces an abundance of vining stems and fine foliage that help protect soils from wind and rain, while improving structure and adding nutrients Plant vetch as a cover crop or green manure and reap the rewards of healthy, thriving soil
- KEY POINTS | WHAT IS VETCH? | WHY GROW VETCH? | SUITABLE
Vetch is a versatile, high-production, low-input crop it can be used for grazing, forage, reen or brown manure, grain for livestock and for seed Vetch is suited to a wide range of rainfall regions and soil types; vetch is more tolerant
- VETCH Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of VETCH is any of a genus (Vicia) of herbaceous twining leguminous plants including some grown for fodder and green manure
- What are the Benefits of Vetch? - Walking Mountains Science Center
Vetches are characterized by small thin leaves growing opposite to each other in pairs with curling tendrils at the end These tendrils help the plant climb as it curls up other plants or structures They have small pea-like flowers that turn into pea pods after blooming
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