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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Food Plots
Planting in the spring
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5502822" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>I'm also in the very unusual circumstance of NOT growing the bucks I hunt. We have very few bucks that live on our property in summer, and most of those are yearlings. About 75% of the bucks we will have to hunt in November come from adjoining river-bottom agricultural land. During the summer, "someone else" is feeding the bucks we will be hunting in fall. Because of this, our summer plots are nowhere near as important as our fall plots. We pour everything into producing the maximum food volume in our plots for fall/winter, even at the expense of summer plots. Perennial clovers, or summer crops left standing, such as standing dead beans, or grains such as milo, etc. can't outproduce what we plant for fall. For this reason, we turn all our summer plots under to plant fall plots because that needs to be our main focus due to the massive influx of deer we normally see only in the fall.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5502822, member: 17"] I'm also in the very unusual circumstance of NOT growing the bucks I hunt. We have very few bucks that live on our property in summer, and most of those are yearlings. About 75% of the bucks we will have to hunt in November come from adjoining river-bottom agricultural land. During the summer, "someone else" is feeding the bucks we will be hunting in fall. Because of this, our summer plots are nowhere near as important as our fall plots. We pour everything into producing the maximum food volume in our plots for fall/winter, even at the expense of summer plots. Perennial clovers, or summer crops left standing, such as standing dead beans, or grains such as milo, etc. can't outproduce what we plant for fall. For this reason, we turn all our summer plots under to plant fall plots because that needs to be our main focus due to the massive influx of deer we normally see only in the fall. [/QUOTE]
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Food Plots
Planting in the spring
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