b"M idwayM ix tM nature's short grasses 27S y s t e mi n aSand Dropseed, Blue Grama, Tall Dropseed, Sand Lovegrass, Greeno B aSprangletop, Plains Bristlegrass, Purple Prairie Clover, Prairie Wildrye,c gVirginia Wildrye, Sideoats Grama, Little Bluestem, Buffalograss, HoodedETWindmill Grass, Red Lovegrass, Little Bluestem - Central Texas, Westernspecies MWheatgrass, Slim Tridens, Waco Indiangrass, Cane Bluestem, Tall Grama, Arizona Cottontop, Curly Mesquite, Texas Cupgrass, Purple Three Awn,Texas Grama, Huisache Daisy, GreenthreadMidway Mix Item #2804Rangeland Seeding Rate 9 lbs / acre Height Lawn & Garden Seeding 1 lb / 2,000 sf 6-18 inches250 sf - $18 / d-pak $39 / lb50+ lbs call for current value CAUTION:Before clearing your own patch of scorched earth Item #6091 WANTED! Mountain Cedars Dead and Alive$24A paradigm shift. Elizabeth McGreevys book totally changed my perceptions of Cedar (Ashe Juniper). Shes been digging 20 years into the politics, history, economics, culture, and ecology surrounding this Texas Hill Country tree from the 1700s to present. Since the 1920s, reporters, writers, scientists, landowners, politicians, and cedar fever victims began blaming Cedar as a non-native, water hogging, grass killing, toxic, useless species to justify its removal. Yet before the 1890s, people highly respected Mountain Cedars as large, straight-timber with strong, decay-resistant heartwood. Most were cut and sold to build a young hard scrabble Hill Country economy. Clearcutting old-growth forests / dense woodlands coupled with continuous overgrazing prairies that followed led to mass soil degradation and erosion. Nature acting to rebuild and safeguard soil, Cedars morphed into pioneering bushes and spread. Up to now, many an acre has been cleared based on cedar tall tales. The book raises the bar to help us better understand how cedar plays into61our critical resource management decisions."