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Food Plots
New to food plots ..help
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<blockquote data-quote="Hunter 257W" data-source="post: 4551118" data-attributes="member: 12277"><p>Weed killers aren't going to work very much at all this time of year since they require the plant to be growing to kill. You do need bare soil exposed for frost seeding to work. It doesn't have to be 100% bare on the entire surface to be successful but there does need to be a lot of bare soil visible. Do you have a disk that you could run over the area a few times? </p><p></p><p> Having said the above though, we put clover on our fescue pastures every February for years and years and over time got a decent amount of clover growing for the cows. Some years we would run a disk over the pasture and some we would just broadcast the clover with no disking. Of course you have to expect a low % of your seeds to come up that way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hunter 257W, post: 4551118, member: 12277"] Weed killers aren't going to work very much at all this time of year since they require the plant to be growing to kill. You do need bare soil exposed for frost seeding to work. It doesn't have to be 100% bare on the entire surface to be successful but there does need to be a lot of bare soil visible. Do you have a disk that you could run over the area a few times? Having said the above though, we put clover on our fescue pastures every February for years and years and over time got a decent amount of clover growing for the cows. Some years we would run a disk over the pasture and some we would just broadcast the clover with no disking. Of course you have to expect a low % of your seeds to come up that way. [/QUOTE]
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