![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiYw_UGTf34RBSuDzAyjR4aDHEPj1k1gAQ-Gg_xO5a51F4Ln4XNLxV99cRoeY4X03RSiIBhTighG41qOAcKdLMUYYYiUR-0B1KKHOaG2xMVHkvjQ7QJSixLd98Q2KSePzF_w7kMLxSgT_j2/s320/covercrop2.jpg)
Loo
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj024MtKXU97WOi96nirWcd3-mbJKkJd8edLq2UFbfngpuBn2TYoLG_jgfbhfyeczAcENqfMs0DoGwHbJxhq30dJ-a6XVR6q04XvDylavjHbScERRpisKpVOM5LZLpGw0YC1EbjI9Tn6Cs5/s320/covercrop3.jpg)
k how much my cover crop has grown in one day. Apparently, my raking instead of distributing the seed pushed it all together. I am wondering if I can move these little plants so they are not so smashed together, but I don't want to chance it. I'm getting such a thrill out of seeing how big they are growing each day.
I don't know for sure what these are, but I have at least two different kinds of cover crop/green manure growing. Just not which two that I planted. Here is a close up of them. So you can see the two varieties in the leaf structure. I'm thinking they may be the peas.
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