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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Food Plots
Different approach this year - let it grow
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5446142" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>The real upside to weed production is the amount of high-quality summer foods produced at minimal cost. In addition, overgrown areas are often excellent cover. The downside is winter food production. Once hard freezes kill all of the anual weeds, food volume plummets. Although the area can remain cover through the winter.</p><p></p><p>The biggest problem is maintaining the weed production. In TN, any open area is going to <strong>try</strong> to progress into the sapling regrowth stage and eventually back into a forest. Finding ways to constantly knock back the woody regrowth is the trick.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5446142, member: 17"] The real upside to weed production is the amount of high-quality summer foods produced at minimal cost. In addition, overgrown areas are often excellent cover. The downside is winter food production. Once hard freezes kill all of the anual weeds, food volume plummets. Although the area can remain cover through the winter. The biggest problem is maintaining the weed production. In TN, any open area is going to [B]try[/B] to progress into the sapling regrowth stage and eventually back into a forest. Finding ways to constantly knock back the woody regrowth is the trick. [/QUOTE]
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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Food Plots
Different approach this year - let it grow
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