Corn Prices

/ Corn Prices #1  

Rocksprings

Silver Member
Joined
Dec 1, 2009
Messages
162
Location
Rocksprings Tex.
Tractor
Bota L2800 HST
Just under $10.00 for a 50 pound bag here in South Texas. Makes me cry when the hogs come in and eat it all. Use to feed all year but not any more.
 
/ Corn Prices #2  
Just under $10.00 for a 50 pound bag here in South Texas. Makes me cry when the hogs come in and eat it all. Use to feed all year but not any more.

Acadamey has it for 6.99 for 40lbs this week.

It as just another expense for hunters. Those spending thousands on leases, guns and bows will moan and groan about 10 dollar corn.
 
/ Corn Prices #3  
I was buying it at Wal-Mart $7 s and change until they went up a dollar 0n 40#. Dicks is to far for any savings for me. I have been buying it at Brookshires grocery stores for $9.99 and get the 10th bag free if you use their store card, tlee you what though, the Brookshires corn is better than the other corn I have bought and that includes some from 2 feed stores.
 
/ Corn Prices #5  
Our local Walmart sells 40 lb bags for $8.97. Tractor Supply sells their 40-lb bags for $8.49. The local feed store sells 50 lb for $10.75. The 50 lb bags are full of powder. The cleanest and best price per lb is TSC. It's rare that the best corn is also the cheapest, but that's the way it is locally.
 
/ Corn Prices #6  
Just under $10.00 for a 50 pound bag here in South Texas. Makes me cry when the hogs come in and eat it all. Use to feed all year but not any more.

Acadamey has it for 6.99 for 40lbs this week.

It as just another expense for hunters. Those spending thousands on leases, guns and bows will moan and groan about 10 dollar corn.

Our local Walmart sells 40 lb bags for $8.97. Tractor Supply sells their 40-lb bags for $8.49. The local feed store sells 50 lb for $10.75. The 50 lb bags are full of powder. The cleanest and best price per lb is TSC. It's rare that the best corn is also the cheapest, but that's the way it is locally.

What you guys are leaving out is this shelled corn or on the cob? I use to buy the 40 or 50 lb of shelled corn because you actually get more corn than buying 50lb bag of corn on cob. But in a real world situation it takes the deer longer to eat the cob corn and they somtimes tire of it and move on, but still stop for a bite. Here i only use it for pics in the cam as its illegal to hunt over and i also have no desire to kill a deer illegally over corn. The shelled corn they just suck it up it seems. I saw i a few weeks ago at the area i hunt in for i think $8 for 50lb bag with cobs. Like this it will last about a week or a bit less once found good, if i put the shelled out they eat in in a few nights as they just suck it up.
 
/ Corn Prices #7  
Shelled whole corn in a bag for running through deer feeders (spin cast)
 
/ Corn Prices #8  
Timed spin feeders make corn last longer. If its on the ground or in a hopper, they will wade thru it, and sound like hogs eatting....Spinning makes them come in the morning and evening and other animals a-running? turkeys are first there, then squirrels. Racoons will climb the stand and try to eat out of the bottom of the feeders.I cannot beat any of these prices yet? They really like sweet potatoes on the ground...
 
/ Corn Prices #10  
Timed spin feeders make corn last longer. If its on the ground or in a hopper, they will wade thru it, and sound like hogs eatting....Spinning makes them come in the morning and evening and other animals a-running? turkeys are first there, then squirrels. Racoons will climb the stand and try to eat out of the bottom of the feeders.I cannot beat any of these prices yet? They really like sweet potatoes on the ground...

Not necessarily. I had a timed 50 gal drum feeder on a lease that was emptied every weekend by a squirrel who had learned to turn the spin cage by paw. That rascal would climb up and dump corn on the ground for hours at a time. :mad:
 
/ Corn Prices #11  
Not necessarily. I had a timed 50 gal drum feeder on a lease that was emptied every weekend by a squirrel who had learned to turn the spin cage by paw. That rascal would climb up and dump corn on the ground for hours at a time. :mad:

Thats sweet! I love squirrels there smart little rascles! Why did you not take a .22 and wait on the poor little smart fellow?
 
/ Corn Prices #12  
Our local Walmart sells 40 lb bags for $8.97. Tractor Supply sells their 40-lb bags for $8.49. The local feed store sells 50 lb for $10.75. The 50 lb bags are full of powder. The cleanest and best price per lb is TSC. It's rare that the best corn is also the cheapest, but that's the way it is locally.

TSC isn't a bad price considering that bulk corn (screened for feed) is near $6.00/bushel at the local co-op. A bushel comes in around 54 pounds depending on RM. I typically buy 1250 bushel for feed but forage is much cheaper this year. A portion of that goes in my corn burner but it will be a pellet burner this year courtesy of TSC and Indiana Hardwoods. I just put 6 ton in the barn

It's not powder, it's cracked kernels because the RM is very low.
 
/ Corn Prices #14  
I made a wire "cage" for my feeder, could of bought one but had the wire. Sure works for keeping the coons and squirrels out though.

Jim, good thing we humans don't eat the cob either, talk about getting "plugged up"!
 
/ Corn Prices #15  
It's not powder, it's cracked kernels because the RM is very low.

The dust that's in my corn feeder has collected from 150 lbs I added a couple of months ago. I bought it at the feed store. When I poured into the feeder, each kernel was covered with a white powder that the wind blew off like talcom powder. When I put a new slinger onto my feeder, I emptied it out and tried to get rid of some of the powder by pitching the corn up with a scoop and letting the wind carry the powder away like chaff off of wheat. I thought it was clean enough to feed and put it back into the feeder. Unfortunately, when it gets down to the last 50 pounds, the powder binds the kernels together so well that the corn won't flow into the hole down to the slinger. I have to add two or three bags of corn to get things going. The next time my feeder gets low, I may just dump out this dusty corn and start over with fresh. I don't see any bugs, so I'm sure the dust isn't from weevils. I'll just keep buying corn from TSC where the kernels are shiny because they have very little dust in them.
 
/ Corn Prices #17  
I have always heard its sheaper to buy from the silo or the farmer in the field. Have buddies that fill their trucks with 55gallon drums and either pull under the grain drop by the silo or to the side of the combine in the field. At least when i use to know more folks that could bait. Where i live now like i said baiting is illeagal. They still sell a ton of corn cause folks still do it. But the only thing i bait is my cameras.
 
/ Corn Prices #18  
It is cheaper to get it at a mill, but the proximity from me negates the savings, but I have read threads on a hunting forum I visit where a few guy's in further West Texas go to feed mills.

Jim, I wonder if that "dusty" corn was bagged from the bottom of the silo? I have also been told that some grain mills add Diatomaceous earth to the silos for bug control.

I have also got the same quality as you from the feed stores (looks like last years W. Texas field corn), so I have been getting mine at Brookshires
 
/ Corn Prices #19  
With corn that high, look into deer feed. Some of the purina stuff goes for that price and has more protein.
We used to use the molasses mix, that was until the bear clawed the feeder, bent the legs, jumped the feeder smashing it to pieces. Now in the off season, when they are dropping the little ones we will through some high protein stuff out.
 
/ Corn Prices #20  
 
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