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Food Plots
Summer food plot quandary
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5311084" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>I would be curious to hear other's suggestions. I'm in a quandary about what to do for summer plots. And a big part of the problem is 1) the unique situation of my property, and 2) the fact I'm not sure how much time, energy and money I want to spend on my summer plots.</p><p></p><p>By "the unique situation of my property" I mean the fact my place is a big island of ridge-and-hollow hardwoods surrounded by vast agricultural bottomlands. Because of this situation, I have few deer that live on my property in summer. Last year, cameras running on all my food plots found only 4 bucks using the property during June through August, two yearlings, a 2 1/2-year-old and a 3 1/2-year-old. My habitat (and food plots) don't really feed many of the deer I have to hunt in fall. Once the acorns begin to fall in September, and most importantly, the neighboring farmers harvest their summer crops, all the deer from the bottomlands flood into my place. Last year I had 52 unique bucks using the property from September to mid-January, including 12 bucks 3 1/2 or older. Because of this massive seasonal shift of deer, my fall/winter food plots are far, FAR more important than summer plots. In fact, for many years I didn't even bother planting summer plots. I just let the plots go fallow in the summer. I would then use spray/broadcast/ mow techniques to plant my fall plots in August or September. In addition, my lack of real agricultural equipment meant that the broadcast and mow planting technique was all I had to work with, and large-seeded plants like cowpeas and soybeans don't germinate well with that practice.</p><p></p><p>However, now I have the acreage and equipment to grow soybeans if I want. I experimented with them last year and they did well. And the low summer deer density did not eat them to the ground as soon as they came up. In fact, I still had a pretty good stand when I turned them under for fall planting in mid-August. But that's the question: should I go to the trouble and expense of planting RR soybeans when I really don't have that many deer to feed in summer, especially knowing I need to turn my plots under earlier than most to make sure I have a great stand of fall food sources before the transient deer start arriving in mid-September? And I REALLY need a good stand of fall plants up and doing well because I can have as many as 80+ deer feeding on those plots (in a bad acorn year) from mid-October to mid-November.</p><p></p><p>So here's my specific question. What should I plant in these plots for the summer? I will plant at the beginning of May and probably turn them under for fall planting some time from mid-August to early September. About half of my plots are newly bulldozed and have hard compacted rocky/cherty poor-quality soil. The other half have been turned for 4-5 years and have decent soil down to about 5 inches. I really need some organic matter in the new plots. The old ones are doing great in that respect (many years of broadcast and mow built up some decent soil).</p><p></p><p>Thoughts? Ideas?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5311084, member: 17"] I would be curious to hear other's suggestions. I'm in a quandary about what to do for summer plots. And a big part of the problem is 1) the unique situation of my property, and 2) the fact I'm not sure how much time, energy and money I want to spend on my summer plots. By "the unique situation of my property" I mean the fact my place is a big island of ridge-and-hollow hardwoods surrounded by vast agricultural bottomlands. Because of this situation, I have few deer that live on my property in summer. Last year, cameras running on all my food plots found only 4 bucks using the property during June through August, two yearlings, a 2 1/2-year-old and a 3 1/2-year-old. My habitat (and food plots) don't really feed many of the deer I have to hunt in fall. Once the acorns begin to fall in September, and most importantly, the neighboring farmers harvest their summer crops, all the deer from the bottomlands flood into my place. Last year I had 52 unique bucks using the property from September to mid-January, including 12 bucks 3 1/2 or older. Because of this massive seasonal shift of deer, my fall/winter food plots are far, FAR more important than summer plots. In fact, for many years I didn't even bother planting summer plots. I just let the plots go fallow in the summer. I would then use spray/broadcast/ mow techniques to plant my fall plots in August or September. In addition, my lack of real agricultural equipment meant that the broadcast and mow planting technique was all I had to work with, and large-seeded plants like cowpeas and soybeans don't germinate well with that practice. However, now I have the acreage and equipment to grow soybeans if I want. I experimented with them last year and they did well. And the low summer deer density did not eat them to the ground as soon as they came up. In fact, I still had a pretty good stand when I turned them under for fall planting in mid-August. But that's the question: should I go to the trouble and expense of planting RR soybeans when I really don't have that many deer to feed in summer, especially knowing I need to turn my plots under earlier than most to make sure I have a great stand of fall food sources before the transient deer start arriving in mid-September? And I REALLY need a good stand of fall plants up and doing well because I can have as many as 80+ deer feeding on those plots (in a bad acorn year) from mid-October to mid-November. So here's my specific question. What should I plant in these plots for the summer? I will plant at the beginning of May and probably turn them under for fall planting some time from mid-August to early September. About half of my plots are newly bulldozed and have hard compacted rocky/cherty poor-quality soil. The other half have been turned for 4-5 years and have decent soil down to about 5 inches. I really need some organic matter in the new plots. The old ones are doing great in that respect (many years of broadcast and mow built up some decent soil). Thoughts? Ideas? [/QUOTE]
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