Well, here will be my food plot experience

/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #1  

schoolsout

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Feb 2, 2011
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Location
Awendaw, SC
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Massey Ferguson 1533
this is the first year we've ever messed with doing a food plot. The one from earlier in warmer weather never did much and we didn't do a whole lot of preparation for it. Hopefully, the cold weather plot will allow us more of a learning curve.

Here is a pic of 1 of the 2 areas we have that have enough sunlight hitting them to do a foodplot. I will update these as time progresses.

We planted turnips/rape in this area and chicory and some rape in another area. Planted on 9-24-11, the day this pic was taken.

edit to add: I haven't done a real soil sample test, but did buy 2 kits by Ferry Morse for testing pH and NPK. The pH seemed to work OK, but the NPK part didn't...maybe my soil was just lacking any nutrients (much of it was constantly disced to form a firebreak). I did end up using my digital Milwaukee pH meter and if I did it right, got a reading of 6.7 on the plot area pictured and 6.9 in the other area so I feel pretty comfortable with pH.

I put 100lbs of 13-13-13 in each plot and will go back in 2-3 weeks and put some more on, I think.
 

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/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #2  
Looking good. Your disc really did a good job with the soil. Why are you only planting half? Road? Or did you just take a picture when half was disced?
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience
  • Thread Starter
#4  
Looking good. Your disc really did a good job with the soil. Why are you only planting half? Road? Or did you just take a picture when half was disced?

Last swipe through was with a disc, but it has been tilled before. It's sandy soil and it was moist from all the rain so it actually looked decent at that point. We do use the part that isn't prepped as a road, but may end up doing something else. I'd like to plant a row of pear/apple trees somewhere along there and they might go in that part.

I'm really dying for winter to come and kill off all the brush so we can get more access (easily) to the property. It's pretty much 100 acres of planted pines. 20 or so about 15-17 years old and the rest is about 7 or so. There are some hardwoods left from the last timber job, though. Looking to up that some.
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #5  
If your going to plant some apples I can really say that the Enterprize apple had been a very healthy and heavy bearer of fruit. Its a newer disease resistant apple and all those healthy leaves crank out big nice apples the deer love. Too many apple variaties if left unsprayed will only have a few small warty apples due to the leaf diseases that cause the leaves to drop. While a person might think "hey its only for deer, I'll just plant what is left over at wal mart", when you consider the time and effort of planting its best to pay a bit more for some better trees. Keiffer pears are good. Many pears get fireblight and just turn black and die. Keiffer and Magness are good pears to plant. Golden Delicious is a good common apple that does ok but does get cedar apple rust that leaves it de-nuded of leaves to feed and grow the apples very large. It strains the tree and they end up having a shorter life if stressed by drought. Jonagold is another apple I've had success with. My Jonathen apples were about big as ping pong balls and not many of them at that. Granny Smith has late apples that extend the season. Plant a mix but make sure you have some disease resistant types.
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #6  
Good point Bilrus. And a lot of those apples need a cross pollinator of a different type. So more than one variety is needed. Apples are good and the deer can share them with you, too.
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience
  • Thread Starter
#7  
I've got growth! Not sure if I put too much seed down, but here is the turnip/rape mix plot...
 

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/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #8  
+1 on the enterprise, combine it with goldrush and you have two almost no-spray trees.
We did that in our crep land.
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #9  
You look like you are on the right track.
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #11  
@LBrown. That is one fine lookin Blue Whizzer, have not seen one of those in many moons.
I did not have much success with my late summer food plot; up here the turkeys are all over each other. Just wait till Spring Turkey season.
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience
  • Thread Starter
#12  
Food plots are not the answer they are a part of the problem.
There are all ready way way to many deer .

Too many deer means less food in the area and smaller deer...not sure what you are trying to get at, but whatever...

Pics from this past weekend...1st two are the turnip/rape mix and the third is Chic Magnet with a little rape added to the far corner when I ran out of seed.
Sawtooth oak in the middle of this area.
 

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/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #13  
Food plots are not the answer they are a part of the problem.
There are all ready way way to many deer .

I can see in some places the deer population is out of hand. In those places, the land owners can get deer depredation permits to reduce the numbers if they are affecting agriculturial operations.

Wildlife plots that are planted also benefit other critters, too. Turkey, quail, pheasant, rabbits...even songbirds, to name a few. I guess most people put in food plots mainly for deer, though. And it depends on the season on what is planted and for what critter.
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #14  
HIJACKED THREAD WARNING....

I thought I would throw a few photos of the plot I prepared this last weekend too! Hope this doesn't offend you,

Bart

Edit: Opps... last two photos are of purple top turnips planted September 1, 2011 and irrigated. I thought they were photos of some plots I planted Sept. 1 as well. But they were not irrigated fields.
 

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/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #15  
I thought I would throw a few photos of the plot I prepared this last weekend too! Hope this doesn't offend you,

Your land is awfully hilly, or do you always drive your tractor sideways?
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #16  
Well...I am using my laptop and turned it sideways.

Bart...Your plots look good. I hope the rain continues this winter. How long ago was the land logged? That looks like some pretty new growth...should be full of deer...
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience
  • Thread Starter
#17  
HIJACKED THREAD WARNING....

I thought I would throw a few photos of the plot I prepared this last weekend too! Hope this doesn't offend you,

Bart

Edit: Opps... last two photos are of purple top turnips planted September 1, 2011 and irrigated. I thought they were photos of some plots I planted Sept. 1 as well. But they were not irrigated fields.


Not a problem at all :)

Looks good, too
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #18  
Bartcephus,

What type of attachment did you use in your first photograph? A plow?
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #19  
Well...I am using my laptop and turned it sideways.

Bart...Your plots look good. I hope the rain continues this winter. How long ago was the land logged? That looks like some pretty new growth...should be full of deer...

He said the rest of the property except the 20 acres was 7 years old, so if they left it fallow for a year that means it was cut 8 years ago.

Bartcephus,

What type of attachment did you use in your first photograph? A plow?

He said he used a disk harrow.

I planted a half pound of turnips last year across more than an acre along with my oats and wheat. I know thats not a lot but i had a good bit of oats and wheat. I dont remember seeing the first turnip? Maybe some about 1" tall but must have all got eaten cause once grown up there was no turnips? Oh well will mix a few in this weekend to the grains that are a few weeks established!
 
/ Well, here will be my food plot experience #20  
@LBrown.
That is one fine lookin Blue Whizzer, have not seen one of those in many moons.
I was always intrigued by them .
They still make them and there is still one place that sells new ones for $1995 when I checked with them 4 or 5 years ago.

My older cousin had one of them when I was a kid back in the 40's and 50's.
Some how I wound up with the big rear wheel pulley when he got rid of the bike.
I installed the pulley on my regular bicycle and bolted an old lawn mower motor to the luggage rack.
It was direct drive from the motor pulley to the big pulley and no clutch .
To stop the bike you hit the brake petal and stalled the motor.
To go again you simply pedaled the bike till the motor started. :)
 
 
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