We need a food plot forum!

   / We need a food plot forum! #61  
Now thats a grain drill right there!! Been looking at the smaller brillion ssp5 but WOW they are high dollar even used... I may have to stick with my broadcasting method for the time being... Besides it takes longer than a drill and my seat time is play time!! Hopef fully I will have some spouting pics after I go check everything out this weekend..

AndyG
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #62  
Now thats a grain drill right there!! Been looking at the smaller brillion ssp5 but WOW they are high dollar even used... I may have to stick with my broadcasting method for the time being... Besides it takes longer than a drill and my seat time is play time!! Hopef fully I will have some spouting pics after I go check everything out this weekend..

AndyG

You're right--Brillion cultipacker-seeders are the high price spread, new or used. Broadcasting is not a bad way to go if you have a single axle cultipacker. Disc the plot, level and groove it with the cultipacker, broadcast the seed, press it in with the cultipacker. Four passes and plenty of play time for you:laughing:.
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #63  
Now thats a grain drill right there!! Been looking at the smaller brillion ssp5 but WOW they are high dollar even used... I may have to stick with my broadcasting method for the time being... Besides it takes longer than a drill and my seat time is play time!! Hopef fully I will have some spouting pics after I go check everything out this weekend..

AndyG

I'm with ya on the broadcasting thing..not optimal, but what I can afford at the time.

Hoping to get turnips and some other items in the ground in about a month. Putting out some lime this weekend.
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #64  
I vote for a dedicated forum as well.

This last weekend I put in my food plots. Tandem Disked, spread the fertilizer/lime, broadcast the seed and then covered by running a drag. About as low tech and cheap as I could get. That fertilizer is getting high. I used a "no till" seed mix, but hopefully will get germination if we ever see any rain here in NE Texas.
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #65  
Thanks!

Not a thing wrong with discing/broadcasting/cultipacking. I still do it on all of my first year plots to incorporate lime and phosphorus.

I need to run twice as many guys (OK another one, but that is twice as many!) and twice as many trucks/tractors/trailers to plant with conventional tillage. Gets expensive quick with twice the equipment running, and its hard to charge enough to make any money with that much involved. With that drill, I can spray/fertilize all of them one week and drill the next. That lets me cover some ground and turn a pretty good profit.
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #66  
Thanks!

Not a thing wrong with discing/broadcasting/cultipacking. I still do it on all of my first year plots to incorporate lime and phosphorus.

I need to run twice as many guys (OK another one, but that is twice as many!) and twice as many trucks/tractors/trailers to plant with conventional tillage. Gets expensive quick with twice the equipment running, and its hard to charge enough to make any money with that much involved. With that drill, I can spray/fertilize all of them one week and drill the next. That lets me cover some ground and turn a pretty good profit.

You put fertilizer down before you plant?

Appreciate and and all insight from you :)
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #67  
Yes, but you shouldn't use urea as a nitrogen (N) source unless its going to rain soon, but you can use calcium coated ammonium nitrate or ammonium sulfate for N in a spot where you need it but there is no rain in the forecast.

Most food plots are legumes anyway(clovers/peas/beans/alfalfa/vetch/trefoil), so N really isn't applied that often. Brassicas, cereal grains, and chicory do need a good amount of N.

Potash will wash in with no problem on the sandy soil here. I will broadcast small amounts of phosphorus or lime, but if you need a lot it really needs to be tilled in.
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #68  
Yes a food plot forum would benefit many. Looking at getting a smaller tractor to put in plots myself as our current tractor is just too big. Has anyone used the RTV1100 to put in food plots. Curious as to if the tranny would hold up to the abuse?
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #69  
hrcarver, I'm planning on putting out turnips, chicory. Our soil is pretty sandy. I'm going to put some lime out this weekend. Should I also put out some fertilizer? I'm assuming the 12-12-12 stuff we bought from TSC will work for this? I sure hope so...
 
   / We need a food plot forum! #70  
Limed and disked our plots 3-4 weeks ago. Today our local fertilizer plant had mis-marked 50lb bags of 19-19-19 for $6/bag (vs $18 or so). At 400 lbs/acre we just saved a bundle! Word got out quick and that deal didnt last long.

In about 2 weeks we'll put out a blend of oats, pt turnips, mustard greens, collards, and hopefully rape. Plus, I'm doing rye with the oats in one plot as a test. I'm told deer here won't eat them much, but nothing ventured nothing gained. The rest of the rye will cover my garden and nurse some new road shoulders.

Will have to borrow a spreader, drag will be landscape rake turned backwards w toplink shortened fully. Seems to work well. Wish I had a 3Pt spreader!!!
 

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