This technique works well if the clover is dormant from drought conditions. But, of course without sunlight your young plants will not grow so that leads to the next step in the process. When you are done destroying your crop of buckwheat your seed will be covered with plenty of organic matter that will die and decay while aiding in germination. NUTRITION: No Sweat provides a versatile food plot option to feed deer the necessary protein and energy they require on a year round basis. As an example of the various elements involved in planning an effective food plot program, let’s take a quick look at the shortcomings of planting only one crop. Convention wisdom would suggest that without heavy tilling equipment this tangled jungle could be quite prohibitive to a no-till planting method. Each of those forages will really pump up the nutrition and attraction for the summer months, but at the same time they will substantially increase the variety of forages offered on the property. The key to Sturgis’ no-till system is buckwheat. Bucks in particular seem to really love to wade out into a soybean field in July and gorge on the nutritious leaves. (No-till drills are expensive, but you can probably pay a local farmer to run through your plot quickly.) Dwarf essex is one of the most common varieties used in food plots. Here is a basic plan for establishing whitetail food sources that will nourish and hold deer for the entire year. It’s also relaxing to putt around on a little tractor while planting and mowing, and it produces a certain sense of satisfaction to do the work yourself, both strong motivators for eventually buying your own small equipment. I've had great luck establishing brassicas blends, clover, chicory, buckwheat, wheat, and rye and when you include a perennial base within your late summer no-till plantings, you create the option of cultipacking the brassica blend into your young perennial plot the following spring. The tiny clover and chicory seeds make easy seed-to-soil contact. It is high in the carbohydrates required to fuel their furnaces when the mercury drops. If so, more palatable crops such as forage soybeans would most likely be over browsed unless they were protected by a food plot fence. No Problem! Some were developed for seed/oil production while others were developed for forage. In fact, every year if find myself tilling less, and less. Compare this to other common food plot crops: oats – 8%, soybeans – 16%, corn – 7%, red clover – 15%. It just takes a little planning, a good eye for adequate soil exposure, and an appropriate planting date. Best of all, this high-powered annual rotation can be completed with very little equipment concerns or personal resources. Only a few typical food plot crops produce more protein than ladino: alfalfa at the bud stage, puna chicory and BioLogic from Mossy Oak (the last two were developed in New Zealand specifically for feeding deer). This is too early for wheat or rye, so we return a last time to broadcast the grains around Labor Day, which is timed perfectly for the 3rd weekend of WI's bow opener. Generally, any kind of legume serves as an excellent summer food source because they are very good at producing protein and drawing important minerals out of the soil. It is at this time that we rely on a 2 quart per acre spraying of 41% Glysophate solution to begin our annual plots. They’ve taken off like wildfire because of their ease of growing, high protein content, productivity and low planting costs. Brassicas are cool-season annuals that have high proteins (15% to 20 % crude protein) and digestibility (65% to 80%). It is high in the carbohydrates required to fuel their furnaces when the mercury drops. In reality, food plots don't have to cost an arm and a leg. Into the early part of the hunting season (October in most areas) the clover is still growing, but very slowly. Also, ladino clover does well in most soil types - all but the driest conditions. Corn is planted in the spring and requires a lot of nitrogen to grow properly – 75 to 100 units per acre even in food plot applications – which makes it a fairly expensive annual to plant. These are practices I've used for several years with lots of success. Brassica Blend is a mixture of fast growing brassicas that produces a lush forage to attract and hold deer to your plots from mid- to late-fall. Forage brassicas can be used to extend grazing season and to provide food plots if they are planted in late July to mid August. Brassica plants prefer soil pH close to 6.8 but will tolerate more acidic conditions. It is more pH sensitive than clover, is more susceptible to choke out if you clip it and leave the residue, requires well-drained sites and is much more susceptible to insects such as leaf-hoppers. Hunter shown weraing Mathews Lost Camo. Getting back to the challenges faced by deer managers on small properties, if you have only one field that you can plant each year, here’s a strategy to maximize that single source to the best of its deer-attracting ability. Also, by cutting back on your perennial forages, for example 4#s of clover instead of 8#s, even more soil exposure can be counted on to work in a crop of brassicas. It grows vigorously and comes back quickly afte… In a springtime no-till plot (in the north), products like Clover Plus or Non-Typical would be good choices (late summer through fall in the south). But when the seeds reach the dough or milk stage - usually in September in most places – deer flock to it. They seem almost desperate to get to corn when times are tough. They have all their eggs in one basket and if that basket doesn’t provide both summer and winter food sources the property is less attractive to deer. Again, the stalks of the buckwheat are an important aspect within the concept of the annual no-till rotation, but that does not mean that buckwheat is your only summer option. How to Plant the Ultimate No-Till Food Plot. Well, the following planting practices may not be universally accepted and widely proven, but they are some of my personal favorites for use in diminutive-resource food plot management applications. I’ve seen five-acre food plots that looked great in mid-summer turn right around and look like they’d been mowed with a bush hog only two weeks later when the plant became most attractive. In the south, the best time to plant your summer food plots is in the spring – March through early June. The addition of Purple Top turnip provides an attractive food source that will sustain the draw of your plot through late fall and winter after the tops are gone. There are also other problems associated with corn. All three can take considerable grazing pressure while offering a reasonable amount of both carbohydrate and protein. After that late season combo planting with the perennial base, your food plot enters early spring with a high % of soil exposed. However, when you achieve that appropriate balance of planting date and soil exposure your experiment can end up being much less of an experiment than you think, and those two factors need to be counted on with the next practice of warning label food plot strategies. Our efforts that begin in the spring reward us with an every increasing deer herd as the hunting season progresses into early January. One-third would be clover, one-third would be corn and one-third would be a mixture of soybeans and grain sorghum. The brassica blends we use are simply broadcasted onto the exposed soil, through the light covering of dead and decaying weed debris. Brassicas can be no-till drilled at ½ the broadcast rate into a sod by applying two quarts/acre glyphosate at least three days prior to seeding. Mature buck hunting, herd and habitat techniques. The 6 acres of plots provide a huge amount of nutrition at a time of little in the whitetail woods, but at the same time allow us to build a high quality QDM herd that includes a population of protected bucks that we can graduate into the next season. With forage rape, kale, tillage radish, and 3 varieties of turnips, our brassica blend has it all. There’s no such thing as one perfect crop for all your food plot needs. In fact, do not be surprised if that same field receives a heavy dose of attention through early spring, or until every last shred of the finger-sized buried treasures are totally consumed. Soybeans are not tough to establish making them another good summertime choice. There are also other challenges that deer managers must face. Deer are still utilizing it, but much less heavily than they did during the peak of the summer. This 50:50 two-pronged approach will provide a nutritionally attractive offering in one location for a full four months or more. As an example of the various elements involved in planning an effective food plot program, let’s take a quick look at the shortcomings of planting only one crop. Sound fun? The key to a forage like buckwheat lies in the stalk that develops to support the massive leaf structure. When properly fertilized, ladino clover (the best protein producer of the clover family) has roughly 24 percent crude protein at peak points during its growth cycle (by mowing it every 4 to 6 weeks you can keep the plant at this point for much of the summer). Unless you’re planting dozens of acres of food plots every year, you will get by cheaper if you pay a local farmer to plant and maintain your food plots for you – at least at first. However, you will lose some control of the timing when you hire the work done. As most of you probably know, brassicas require cold temperatures to convert the plants’ high levels of starch into sugar and transform it into its most attractive, palatable stage. The protein level starts dropping fast. I’ve seen rape the size of a large broccoli plant eaten right down to the roots seemingly overnight. It takes thinking back many years to the last time I planted perennials by themselves. No tiller? As the growing season ends, the clover increasingly lays down on the ground becoming less accessible to deer – especially if there is a snowfall on top of it. You may even have an area you want to develop that contains early successional growth such as aspen or red willow. However, we aren't discussing conventional wisdom in this article, but instead you can look at that standing mess as a great opportunity. Your no till food plot can all begin between June 1st and July 15th, to offer you a wide range of easy planting options! However, if you can get sorghum past the deer in September (either by offering so much they can’t eat it all or by mixing in the taller forage varieties) it serves as a good winter food source, and is more drought-tolerant than corn. Cereal grains are highly attractive to deer, and they perform well under a wide range of conditions. Establishing a No-Till Bean Plot is a great practice for folks who may lack the resources of traditional planting methods, or possibly even more importantly, "TIME". Deer won’t touch sorghum during the summer. In the case of first time food plots, you are trying to establish overall deer usage so the sweeteners can help. Your goal should be to design a food plot program that addresses both time frames equally, providing nutritious and attractive foods to help your herd reach its potential while drawing and holding deer in your area. I don’t know enough about this plant yet to offer why deer are so attracted to it, but I do know it is in the brassica family and that progressive dairy farmers in some areas plant forage brassicas to raise the protein levels in their cows to increase milk production. It’s that simple. Buckwheat is also very attractive when young but depending on the quality of the soil and growing conditions, buckwheat can also be transformed into a 3-4 jungle by late summer. We return around Labor Day to plant the grains. Bow hunters especially can benefit from this mixture by establishing a food plot in remote areas with little preparation. Without overstepping my technical knowledge here, suffice it to say that during the late fall and winter deer will eat dwarf essex rape right to the ground. For example, red clover is inexpensive to establish and is better suited to a wider range of soil and climatic conditions, but it does produce less protein. It’s no secret that cereal grains – wheat, oats, cereal rye, triticale – are popular choices for planting in food plots managed for whitetails. Can you imagine incorporating a successful spring brassica planting within an existing clover field with an underlying focus of a hunting season punch? If you care to read on and push the envelope of small parcel food plot strategies, then proceed with caution and consider how these practices that have been designed for the resource-challenged could possibly lead you to increased success. It’s like Ho-Ho’s to a child – junk food for deer. If you hunt late in the season you already know this lesson. Brassicas, in general, are also cheaper to plant than typical food plot grain options such as corn and soybeans. In this video I plant 2 separate small food plots. No-Till Annual Food Plot Rotations. Im going to tell you how you can play with the big boys when it comes to producing those beautiful fields of green and who knows, even if you own all the tools of luxury when it comes to a little food plot fun, you may just want to give your tractor a bit of a rest after reading about these three strategies. The winter wheat and rape will benefit from the nitrogen the soybeans returned to the soil. This may sound unconventional, but it works and there is no reason for you not to have some high quality plots at a time when the deer have little in the whitetail woods and your hunting season enjoyment can be influenced the most. Food Plot Seed for Wildlife Brassica Seed Blend is a 100% brassica blend that is easy to establish and highly preferred by deer during the winter months. However, Im the type of food plotter that just cant stand to see exposed soil go to waste! Typically, these legumes should be planted at a time when sufficient moisture will be forthcoming so the plants will properly germinate and start growing a root system. In the north, spring planting works, but you can also plant in September to take advantage of a wet season that typically occurs from mid-September through November. Because although perennials have a great window of utilization, that window does not typically cover the best periods of hunting season through the early spring, especially the further north you travel. USES: To attract and provide nutrition for deer. On the other-hand, if your combinations included forages such as brassicas or oats and you live in northern climates, either variety will be dead by the time the spring months roll around. The reason for the forage variety is because in many cases the brassicas can experience heavy and consistent grazing within the perennial blend through early autumn. To insure a good kill of the buckwheat I like to follow up the crushing of the field with a 1 quart per acre of Glysophate. 6 acres of plots may seem like a lot of plot acreage to work with, but its actually extremely easy to prepare and plant the entire acres with just a few timely hours of work every few weeks. This works with a brassica blend, clover, annual grains, chicory, and I've even established a lawn in my backyard with this practice simply, it works! Though protein will also be converted to energy by deer, the decreased protein levels in the clover make it a less attractive energy source during the winter. There are other legumes, however, that seem to do best in the south. Depending on the parcel (even neighboring parcels can vary greatly) the rate of foraging on a brassica planting can vary from \"nothing left on the ground within a month of planting\" to \"rotting bulbs and greens in the Spri… In areas with lower deer densities I’d split the field into three parts. Later in the season and into the winter the clover has totally stopped growing and begins to lose its appeal. Rape is a cool-season annual forage that is relatively quick to germinate. Like winter wheat, rape is easy to grow and inexpensive. This assures a good supply of both legumes for summer utilization and grains for fall and winter attraction. At this time of the year deer are looking for high carbohydrate foods that produce fast energy and heat. An ATV, a 25-gallon sprayer, and a broadcaster are all the tools you really need to use, and the keys for your plantings are an elimination of potential weed debris, and adequate soil exposure. Deer will continue to use it, even digging through snow to reach it, but only when more preferred sources aren’t available. I personally love my double 5 cultipacker that I can pull behind an ATV, but even the ATV tires themselves can become an effective tool for crushing the stalks of your summer annual. I used to enjoy my tractor and all the trimmings but I havent missed it one bit and I enjoy both the efficiency AS WELL AS the results. The advantage of brassicas is the fact that deer generally will leave them alone until the onset of colder weather at which time the plot will become very attractive. Hancock's No Till FALL Food Plot Seed Mix allows hunters with limited tillage equipment a method to grow a great food plot. Your late summer no-till planting was a huge success! One food plot seed dealer told me it is like a weed: “Just throw it out in a damp place and it’ll grow.” While I’d go to greater lengths to assure good production, it’s nice to be able to plant something that’s easy to establish with limited equipment. red clover offers an adequate food supply on 1/2 of every plot post Spring-green up, and at the same time creates an incredible, nutrient-rich seed bed after it is disced or tilled under to plant the brassica combination that follows. The small plot of rape I planted last year was the most attractive plot on the farm last November. Most deer managers consider clover to the universal food plot crop. Green forage is a better winter food source than corn or sorghum in areas with high deer densities. In this video I compare no till and tilling by planting the same blends of Brassicas in 2 separate plots. Why? Do not be temped to frost-seed a brassica blend! *Do you crave no till food plots and owning nothing but the best equipment? They don’t have the luxury of being able to make mistakes because they can’t simply shift over to a different part of the property. Assuming a high deer density that would assure maximum utilization of the entire field, I’d plant it to soybeans in the spring and then come back in mid-September with a no-till drill and interseed a mixture of winter wheat and rape. However, one of the biggest problems faced by deer managers on small properties is determining the best planting for a limited number of acres. You see, before committing this food plot into a full no-till operation, I could take my shovel and dig all day and not find one earthworm. Do not worry about tilling in the buckwheat, but instead, broadcast your seed right into the stand. Deer would still utilize the beans even if the plants are flattened. The brassicas were gone by mid-winter and you can spray the wheat out of the field to prepare for your next late summer planting, but how about another planting option? Most deer managers consider clover to the universal food plot crop. We time our sprayings to end by the later of July so the plots are ready for a broadcasting of brassicas. It is a very versatile forage and can tolerate cold, hot and dry conditions, making it more productive during times when other forages are not. Clover is clearly a second choice and if you don’t have a good fall/winter food source on your hunting property deer will start to drift off. Alsike clover does well in a wide range of conditions including damp bottomlands. Fortunately for those folks, there is still an opportunity to provide a nutritional benefit to the local deer herd and improve their deer hunting with a minimal amount of equipment. Find the corn and you find the deer. With regard to deer preference, oats consistently rank higher than the other cereal grains … Much of my fall and winter hunting is focused around cornfields. This couldn't be further from the truth. I’ve made a mighty strong case for ladino clover as the best summertime food plot crop, but before you run out and buy enough seed to plant the whole county, lets see how it does during the rest of the year. To furnish a high quality food source for post-rut bucks and pregnant does. When standing along side and looking into a field of buckwheat, take a look at how much soil is showing through the stiff, tall stalks of the planting. These vegetables, like turnips, rapeseed, radishes, and canola, are high in protein and glucose, making them a favorite among whitetail deer. When you standing buckwheat has been seeded and fertilized in the late summer its time to cultipack. Then make sure to check out the Genesis 3 Planterthat I am blessed to use today! You don’t need expensive equipment to put in serious food plots. If you have the use of a cultipacker at your disposal I've found that crushing the field twice works very well. Your late summer no-till planting was a huge success! Through several years of trial and error I've found that you need a minimum of 50% soil exposure but that is always possible with just a little planning. Though damaged, most of the bean plants would have already filled their pods by mid-September. We don’t use the ordinary turnips you can get at the local feed mills. They seem almost desperate to get to corn when times are tough. By the late summer the trees will nothing more than dried out and decaying branches and you can use the same methods to distribute and plant your seeds. Besides, deer are more strongly drawn to grains at this time. Brassicas are greens that are proven to do well throughout the United States. Initially used for cover crops, soil conservation and forage for domestic animals, brassicas were popularized for deer food plots by Biologic, which imports varieties from New Zealand where deer are raised commercially. Granted, it is a great starting point, but let’s follow clover through the year to see where it comes up short.During the summer, clover is at its peak production and is utilized most heavily by deer. The term “brassica” covers turnip, kale, forage rape and swede. 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