Grass in an old hayfield

Do you think I could get some pollinators to grow in it by fall broadcasting? Or would I need to kill it off first?
 
I don't know much about brome to be honest. I know it makes great hay and it's common in ditch mixes where I grew up. I wouldn't kill it. That could touch off the weed apocalypse next year. What I would try, is coming in with some durable flowers like red clover, white clover, and hairy vetch. I'd try throw and mow on it late in the season, like 4 weeks before frost.

It likely won't be great, but I've seen hairy vetch muscle its way into my quackgrass like a boss, and that stuff flowers all season it seems. The white clover and red clover could/should start showing up in clumps.

My lawn at the cabin was solid untouched quackgrass when I got there. I got to work clearing trees, pulling stumps, and put in the cabin. To make my lawn, I picked up the sticks and just started mowing the quack grass. I never planted anything, or amended anything. I just mowed what God gave me. That was 5 years ago. Today, my lawn is a destination clover plot for the neighborhood deer as it seems it's almost 50% white clover. There wasn't a blade of clover until I got to mowing and mowing.
 
It's definitely a cool season grass. Ours goes dormant in the hot summer months after we cut it and plenty of native forbs pop up then. If you don't plan on haying it, you could mow it late spring/early summer and see what happens.
 
There is a decent amount of milkweed throughout and a nice patch of blackberries. But I don’t recall anything ever growing after it was hayed years ago.

Mowing it early summer would help other species grow?
 

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I'd broadcast a broadleaf seed mix of whatever I want to grow next like vetch, buckwheat, clover or brassica, mow low on top of the broadcasting, wait 2 days and then spray with clethodim and roundup.
 
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