Standing Soybeans

RobDooley

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Dec 11, 2018
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1,645
Location
Hamilton County, Tn.
Farmer was harvesting soybeans yesterday in river bottom farm. Due to all the earlier rainfall in Hickman he will most likely leave A LOT unharvested. They got muddy when the river got up into fields. Beans are not completely ruined just dirty. Not worth the effort to try clean. Do you think the deer will eat them?
 

Boone25/06

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Nov 9, 2014
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315
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Marshall
Same experience here as BSK. I like to put a few mixed in the planter with corn. It creates a thick jungle the deer love in the summer, but as soon as the leaves yellow they show no interest in beans until very late in winter and often when I mow down before planting in spring beans resprout everywhere. No corn left but bean covering the ground.
 

catman529

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Nov 10, 2010
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Franklin TN
Deer will eat soybeans left standing. However, I find they do so only when little else is available, usually late in the year into the winter months.
People plant them up north for a food source when snow covers the ground. I just don't see deer going for standing dried out beans around here much at all. They will eat the weeds that grow up underneath them though.
 

Bone Collector

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Sep 9, 2009
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Murfreesboro, TN
Deer will eat soybeans left standing. However, I find they do so only when little else is available, usually late in the year into the winter months.
depending on the field size, would it be better if they talk to the farmer and see if he will bush hog them, or let them cut them?

I would assume if you cut them in some form or fashion, that it would be of more use to the deer.
 

BSK

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Mar 11, 1999
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81,484
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Nashville, TN
I think standing dead soybeans are such a low-quality attractant, I would not advise that strategy. I would recommend something else be planted in those fields for Dec-Mar.
 

Boll Weevil

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Jun 26, 2011
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Hardeman
It's amazing how deer in different places seem to have different palates. My deer stay in the beans…even after the combines roll through they'll pick up waste grain. They won't touch radishes but destroy turnips while in other areas it the opposite.

He probably thought he ate a bad soybean.

1635546233139.jpeg
 
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catman529

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Nov 10, 2010
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29,472
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Franklin TN
What about throwing wheat out to grow up with the standing beans
Around here, deer love fresh young wheat. I plant it thick as if you were seeding a new lawn. Comes up a green carpet and the deer tear it up while it's only a few inches tall.
 

Jcalder

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Sep 18, 2012
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Cookeville
Around here, deer love fresh young wheat. I plant it thick as if you were seeding a new lawn. Comes up a green carpet and the deer tear it up while it's only a few inches tall.
This has been my experience the last few years, but this year has been different. I don't have much for acorns and someone does as the deer are MIA
 

JCDEERMAN

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Jul 19, 2008
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17,677
Location
NASHVILLE, TN
That is a good idea....however, these fields are huge! He doesn't spray with chemicals to stop greening.
If he does beans again next year and doesn't rotate to corn, you may try spreading some wheat out when the bean leaves start turning yellow.

Everywhere is different as others have mentioned regarding deers' palates. Deer love the beans in my area. Of course, I'm surprised they knew what they were. I don't think there's any soybeans anywhere 8-10 miles from us
 

Bushape

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Jan 9, 2019
Messages
296
Late season cut bean fields are gold mines around here !
Same for here in Southern Wayne Co. A lot of the hardwoods have long been harvested and replaced with plantation pine. Once the acorn crop is gone the deer can be seen loading up on the leftover soybeans. Hits well with the rut too from the second week in December on.
 

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