Farming Peanuts with Cover Crops in Virginia

Cover crops” and “peanuts” don’t get used in the same sentence too often. With limited herbicide options available and a harvest reliant on digging, farmers tend to rely heavily on spraying and tillage to manage weeds in peanut production.

But southeastern Virginia farmer Clay Lowe is bucking that trend. He has been pushing conservation ag techniques into his peanut rotations on his family’s operation, Cedar Point Farm, for over a decade.

Peanut harvest at Cedar Point Farm in Virginia, operated by Clay Lowe and his family (upper right corner, with his daughter, Harper). (Photo credits: Claudio Rubione, GROW)

Lowe uses a specific cover crop rye species, Abruzzi rye, which he favors for its robust spring growth abilities. Tune into the video below to learn how Lowe manages that cover crop each year to suppress weeds, preserve moisture and limit erosion in his peanut fields, all with little or no tillage:  


Video by Claudio Rubione, GROW; text by Emily Unglesbee, GROW