Rzrbck918
Well-known member
Anyone had experience with planting foodplots outside of the standard wheat, Biologic, etc? If so, what have you planted that did well?
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Anyone had experience with planting foodplots outside of the standard wheat, Biologic, etc? If so, what have you planted that did well?
This is what I was looking for...thanks for the information. I like the idea of grains mixed with Peas etc. My experience is limited but I haven't had the best luck with some of the commercially available mixes.Winter peas or iron clay peas with oats, winter wheat, or cereal rye is my got to but I would avoid planting less then a acre of peas most small plots will be devoured before they can establish. Some forage soybeans are good to for large plots. If you are in hog country avoid planting corn take my word for it. I've planted clover, deer love it but takes work to keep it established, all sorts of turnips and radishes but stop because my deer wouldn't eat the leafy tops only the bulbs come about January, lots of experience with oats and other cereal grains one of the easiest to do and see results.
What exactly were you looking for?
Works good in Arkansas and Oklahoma as well!Plant a garden, works well in North Idaho.
I mis LCI have primarily switched all of my food plots to a cereal grain mix or an LC mix. Here is the recipe that I follow:
Plant ALL in one plot in strips or blocks
Alice, Kopu II, Durana (or comparable) white clover 10% of plot, sow at 6#'s per acre with the rye combination in the fall or in the spring with oats and berseem clover. Correct Ph and P&K with soil tests
Brassicas in 45% of plot
Purple Top Turnips 3#
Dwarf Essex Rape 2#
GroundHog Forage radish 5#
Plant in mid to late July in most Midwest states, or 60-90 days before your first killing frost, Use 200#'s of 46-0-0 urea and 400#'s of 6-28-28 per acre. Follow the dead brassicas with oats and berseem or crimson clover in mid spring at 60#'s oats and 12-15#'s berseem clover and/or 50#'s of chickling vetch)
Cereal Grain combo in 45% of plot
Winter rye 50-80#'s per acre (56#'s = a bushel)
Spring oats 80-120#'s per acre (32#'s = a bushel)
Austrian Winter Peas or 4010/6040 Forage peas 20-80#'s per acre
Red Clover 8-12#'s per acre or white clover at 6#'s per acre (or 20-40 pounds hairy vetch and 20-30#'s crimson clover on sandy soils)
Groundhog Forage Radish 5#'s per acre
Plant in late August to early September, if following well fertilized brassicas use 100 - 200#'s of urea, if starting a new plot add 400#'s of 6-28-28
Rotate the brassicas and rye combo each year
This is what I was looking for...thanks for the information. I like the idea of grains mixed with Peas etc. My experience is limited but I haven't had the best luck with some of the commercially available mixes.
Roundup ready alfalfa. No weeds no replanting nothing really any higher quality in a total analysis. The only time they won't use it is when acorns drop.
This is what I plan to try this year.Roundup ready alfalfa. No weeds no replanting nothing really any higher quality in a total analysis. The only time they won't use it is when acorns drop.
Thanks for the information. I like the idea of an exclusion cage. What do you use for that? Height?I always get my seed from the local seed store. My favorite mix is Austrian winter peas at #60 per acre with oats added at #50 per acre. Get a soil test and then add the necessary lime or fertilizer I tried to save time and money for years on this step but there's no substitute for proper PH. Also iron clay peas and rye are a very hardy combo a better mix for areas with poor soil or smaller plots sow at the same rate as above. The one thing I will stress about peas don't plant them unless your plots over a acre I've found 2 -2.5 acres to be the sweet spot. Use a exclusion cage in the middle of the plot to determine how everything is growing as deer and other wildlife will start hammering the new pea plant almost immediately. I've planted anywhere from the last week of August to the last week of September just depends on moisture.
I go with a bag of 46-0-0 about a month before the season starts on my brassicas, makes a huge jump... and I apply it right before a rainIf you bow hunt, go back once the plot is up and only fertilize within bow range of your stand. That’ll give you a sweet spot.
Just make sure the soil PH and potash levels are ok. It's not a deal breaker but the stand will last many more years if you start right.This is what I plan to try this year.