Echinochloa esculenta
OTHER-MILLET-JAPANESE (24G) or Barnyard Millet, considered a cereal grain, can serve as part of a green manure crop for crop rotation, soil restoration and erosion control. Alternatively, you can grow it separately as fodder for animals and grain for birds. Sow the frost-tender seeds in spring and summer when soil temperatures exceed 15°C, as frost will kill the plants.
Livestock can graze on it before six weeks. Or it can be turned into silage before it seeds, and hay or grain once the seeds appear but before they scatter. You can also process it into flour for bread making. It is also rich in carbohydrates, proteins, dietary fiber, and essential minerals such as magnesium, phosphorus, and iron. Being a gluten-free grain makes it suitable for people with celiac disease or gluten sensitivity.
“The grain contains twice the protein content of regular milled white rice (Yabuno, 1987)” and is gluten free.
Well suited for colder climates and wet soil, Japanese Millet can survive in standing water and flooded soil. Although considered a weed in rice paddies, it serves as a great cover crop for weed control when mixed with cowpeas. This increases the nitrogen fixation of the cowpeas even though it does not fix nitrogen.
Japanese millet is a drought tolerant, high yielding plant that is easy-to-grow for any gardener, and tolerates a wide range of soil types and conditions. It thrives in warm conditions with temperatures ranging from 18-30°C (64-86°F). The seeds germinate best when the soil temperature is between 18-25°C (64-77°F).
Grow with other Green Manuer crops such as mustard, cow peas, white prosso, lupin legumes and crimson clover. Or you can purchase the Green Manuer Spring Mix