What crops are you wanting to grow exactly?
This year I planted a small garden of corn, beans, and squash hoping for those to be the primary ones (I figured I should start with the crops that have the longest history here, and I can try the European imports later). I tried amaranth and sunflowers as companion plants to those, plus a couple of smaller experiments on the side. Squash and amaranth seem to be doing the best out of all those so far. Beans really should do well here (and of course they're nitrogen fixers themselves), because that's what basically all the big commercial farms around here grow. But at my smaller scale it seems I'm gonna need to
fence out the
rabbits first for beans to have any chance. Corn might have done better, too, if it weren't for the rabbits and a couple bad hail storms.
In terms of broad categories, I'm focused on crops that could be used as a
staple, or at least provide significant calories. My understanding is that high-calorie crops tend to also be high nitrogen requirement crops (with the obvious exception of beans), but I don't remember where I read that and maybe I just made it up.
You are at a high elevation in a semi-arid environment with a relatively shallow soil. I'm guessing this area did not support Ponderosa pine or other trees of much stature prior to settlement and could be considered a 'wide open space'.
Correct, no ponderosas here, just juniper and pinyon pine, 20 or 30 feet tall max. If by wide open space you mean mostly treeless grassland, not quite. The natural succession for these fields would be to sagebrush and then moderate density pinyon-juniper, as long as climate change doesn't throw a big wrench in that. Water availability limits the tree density so the
canopy never fully closes, and there's always going to be plenty of sun hitting the understory, at least in patches. So closer to a savanna type ecosystem than to old growth ponderosa or the like.
I am wondering about lupins, desmodiums and possibly lead plant as possible nitrogen fixers for your soil
Lupines are all over the place here, I just hadn't realized that they were nitrogen fixers until just now. I wanted to plant more of them anyway because they're pretty and attract pollinators, but now I'm even more interested. The other two don't look familiar, and according to iNaturalist they don't grow anywhere near here.
The question I have is what do you need the nitrogen for? It will be crop dependent. The requirements for your native grasses is going to be quite different for a commodity crop or different yet from subsistence crops that are adapted to the area you are in.
Definitely more interested in low-input subsistence crops than in commodity crops, or in native grasses for their own sake.
And this is definitely where my understanding starts to get much fuzzier. I've heard both corn and squash called "heavy feeders" which I understand to mean they "need" lots of NPK synthetic fertilizer in a system where that's taken for granted. My very vague understanding with phosphorous and potassium (and various micronutrients) is that if I don't want to depend on fertilizer then I should focus on soil microbiology, which should extract those elements from minerals in the soil and make them available to plants. That sounds much more complicated to me than just sowing seed for nitrogen fixers, so that's why I'm focused on nitrogen at the moment.
Also, depending on how long the area was cropped, (before being left to return to 'Native Grassland', nitrogen might not be the highest priority in amending the soil. It might be organic matter. Increasing organic matter (by growing ROOTS in the soil) will buffer and/or improve many variables in the soil where you are.
I'm not sure of the exact history of my land, but I don't think it's ever been intensively farmed in the way that like Nebraska or somewhere has. I think that the settlers here have tended towards
cattle grazing more so than growing crops, on average. I for sure want to increase soil organic matter as well, which is part of why I don't want to start by clearing the field. There's a decent amount of roots there already, but I'd like to see more, and I figure it's even better if those roots are also fixing nitrogen. Whether or not it's not my single biggest limiting factor, it can't hurt, right?