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Food Plots
Rocky food plot soils
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<blockquote data-quote="megalomaniac" data-source="post: 5684324" data-attributes="member: 2805"><p>I still think you are hurting yourself with tilling the ground.... especially if you get any run off and lose any valuable dirt, or wind blow off dirt. If you could get a really good stand of summer biomass annually, I bet you could have a full inch of topsoil in just 5 years... but its going to be a LONG process.</p><p></p><p>I have 3 acres that looks like that (except no big chunk rocks). It's still the worst performing plot I have, but every year it gets a little better (3rd summer planting this year).</p><p></p><p>The biggest problem with no layer of topsoil is that greminatung/ growing conditions have to be almost PERFECT to have a chance at any significant production. Go 3 w without rain, and the plot is lost</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="megalomaniac, post: 5684324, member: 2805"] I still think you are hurting yourself with tilling the ground.... especially if you get any run off and lose any valuable dirt, or wind blow off dirt. If you could get a really good stand of summer biomass annually, I bet you could have a full inch of topsoil in just 5 years... but its going to be a LONG process. I have 3 acres that looks like that (except no big chunk rocks). It's still the worst performing plot I have, but every year it gets a little better (3rd summer planting this year). The biggest problem with no layer of topsoil is that greminatung/ growing conditions have to be almost PERFECT to have a chance at any significant production. Go 3 w without rain, and the plot is lost [/QUOTE]
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