Cereals

  • Forage Oat

    Forage Oat is an annual cereal providing fast establishment, high biomass production, and quality grazing or silage feed. Ideal for autumn or early spring sowing, Forage Oat rapidly covers seasonal feed gaps, particularly suited for grazing dairy or beef cattle. It performs well across a wide range of soil conditions and climates, thriving with adequate moisture or rainfall above 500 mm annually.

  • Forage Barley

    Multi-graze Forage Barley offers rapid establishment and high forage yields, with multiple grazing opportunities throughout the growing season. Its palatable, nutritious forage makes it ideal for filling seasonal feed gaps, especially autumn-sown for winter and spring grazing. Suitable for most soils and climates, it thrives best with rainfall above 450 mm annually or under supplementary irrigation.

  • Triticale

    Triticale is a vigorous cereal hybrid combining the yield potential of wheat and resilience of rye. Ideal for grazing, silage, or grain production, it provides substantial biomass production and good nutritional quality. Triticale suits a broad range of climates and soils, particularly effective in marginal areas with rainfall between 400–800 mm annually, offering farmers a versatile feed option.

  • Ryecorn

    Ryecorn is a hardy annual cereal renowned for early-season forage production, soil improvement, and erosion control. Its rapid growth and tolerance to poor soils and cooler conditions make it ideal as winter forage, green manure, or a cover crop. Ryecorn adapts well to rainfall conditions as low as 400 mm annually, making it an effective feed option in challenging environments.

  • Millet

    Millet is a warm-season annual grass producing substantial summer feed under hot, dry conditions. With rapid growth and excellent drought tolerance, Millet offers reliable feed production when other pastures decline. It suits sandy or lighter soils, performing best under 350–600 mm rainfall or irrigation, commonly used for grazing, hay, or silage in dry climates.