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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 3535518" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>Agricultural plantings are always going to provide the highest level of nutrition, but it's darn hard to provide enough winter agricultural plants to feed a large deer herd, especially during those not-so-rare acorn failure years.</p><p></p><p>On a list of top winter plants, I would have cool-season clovers, winter peas, cereal grains (wheat, oats, etc.), standing corn (grown in summer), brassicas (turnips, rape, etc.).</p><p></p><p>Anyone else want to add to that list?</p><p></p><p>I would also like to see any property have a lot of early succession areas that will naturally grow honeysuckle, native forbs, native legumes, greenbrier, etc. Although these plants aren't real high quality, an acre of successional regrowth can grow a huge volume of these moderate-quality plants.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 3535518, member: 17"] Agricultural plantings are always going to provide the highest level of nutrition, but it's darn hard to provide enough winter agricultural plants to feed a large deer herd, especially during those not-so-rare acorn failure years. On a list of top winter plants, I would have cool-season clovers, winter peas, cereal grains (wheat, oats, etc.), standing corn (grown in summer), brassicas (turnips, rape, etc.). Anyone else want to add to that list? I would also like to see any property have a lot of early succession areas that will naturally grow honeysuckle, native forbs, native legumes, greenbrier, etc. Although these plants aren't real high quality, an acre of successional regrowth can grow a huge volume of these moderate-quality plants. [/QUOTE]
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