Mathews Inc.
Florida Gator Results Are Up
Whitetail Deer
Contributors to this thread:
NY Bowman 24-May-17
nutritionist 24-May-17
buzz mc 24-May-17
writer 24-May-17
NY Bowman 24-May-17
Swampbuck 24-May-17
sportoutfitter 24-May-17
Zim 24-May-17
Steve H. 24-May-17
From: NY Bowman
24-May-17
Results are up! Looks like I'll be heading back down to try for a few more gators! Good luck to everyone.

Who else is going?

From: nutritionist
24-May-17

nutritionist's DeerBuilder embedded Photo
nutritionist's DeerBuilder embedded Photo

I posted this a few places recently and hopefully it gives you all food for thought.

So many of you are looking at adding acreage to their food plots but should first make sure you are doing all you can do with your current acreages. My goal for all of you is to increase your food plot efficiency by 25% or more. No matter if you are an experienced food plotter or beginner, you all can do better. Here is 10 things you can do to increase your growth and nutrition per acre of land planted. 1) Learn the effective planting depth of all forages you plant. Most clovers and brassicas are only needing to be planted 1/8-1/4" deep. Corn, soybeans and sorghums at least 1" deep. 2) Proper preplant burn down, both timing and effectiveness. So many people stunt weeds vs complete kill them. You need to use the right tank mix of the product. You need to spray at the correct temperature. You need to not clip then spray but spray actively growing weeds. You also need to set your sprayer pressure to apply more water particles and less volume of water. 3) Effective seed to soil contact. You will see faster germination, less weed competition and a thicker stand by making sure you have good seed to soil contact. Again, make sure your seed when rolled is at the proper planting depth after rolling. 4) Proper soil ph for what you are planting. So many people understand you need a soil ph range typically between 6.0-7.0. What happens when you have a 7.5 ph or 5.5 ph? Do you still plant ladino clover and chicory when you have a 5.0 ph? What do you do when your soil test shows 7.3 and higher ph's? Do you add sulfur to bring it down to the effective range? 5) Proper fertilizations for what your planting. I am seeing 90% of the soil samples from across the US being low in potassium. So many people have been using standard 10-10-10's, 15-15-15's and generic fertilizer recommendations without being aware of the amount of nutrients your food plots are mining from the soil. You should never plant without a soil test. You should always fertilizer based on that soil test. 6) Split applications of fertilizers. So many people put the full rate of fertilizer down at planting but in cases where high rates are required, you can benefit by putting 200-300 lbs at planting and the rest down 4 weeks later. Another thing most do not do is use a fall application of potassium for their perennials. Most perennials need 200-300 lbs of potassium every year if you are getting effective growth. Put down your fall "winterization." 7) Use of foliar plant foods. Many progressive crop farmers now use micro nutrients and yet very few food plotters do. You will see an increase in growth, plant protein, plant mineral content and plant sugar content by going over the top 1-2 times per growing season. They can cost at little at $5-10 per acre and can give one a 20-40 to 1 return on your dollar for that more nutritious growth per acre. 8) Plant the right seeding rate. For legumes, so many people are planting coated seed with lower germination counts and old or expired dated seed. The end result is less viable seeds growing per square foot. The end result increases the potential for weed growth and a thin or thinning stand. Another thing most do not know is that the thicker the stand, the higher the nutrition in that field. Every bite that the deer takes will be more nutritious. For brassicas and winter bulbs you want to think the opposite though. We want to have the proper range of seeding on brassicas that grow bulbs to get maximum root development. Too think of seeding will crowd out these forages. 9) Practice plot rotation. You will see a yield bump of 10-15% by planting corn after legumes. You will become more efficient if you rotate corn and soybeans year after year. You also shouldn't plant soybeans on the same field more than 2 years straight. You will see an exponentially higher chance of having plant disease issues on those fields. Also planting a spring cover crop before you plant your fall brassicas can help set yourself up for success, expecially if there is annual clovers in that plot. 10) Plant forages that produce more tonnage and available nutrients per acre. Grasses are not a preferred species for deer. Oats and grains produce 25- 50% less protein and only 25-30% as much calcium compared to legumes. Learn what forages produce higher nutrient levels. Don't rely on the wild claims of the industry. Think beyond Ladino Clover. 11) Take forage samples. Get a historical baseline. Then see what your current nutrient levels are for the forage your growing. You can spot trouble areas by comparing your soil samples to plant tissue samples. I can help you all with this if you have questions. Look at my forage sample results from last year and this upcoming year to see unbiased data and what is the norm for various species. 12) Plant the correct species for your soil type and location. If you have shade, plant shade tolerant forages. If you have sand or sandier grounds, plant species that will handle that better. Every species has it's pros and cons. If you have wet ground, know what happens if you plant the typical ladino clover and chicory mixes on that ground. Research what clovers tolerate wet, which tolerate lower ph's and which tolerate shade better. There are many more things to consider but this is a good start. I have no doubt that everyone can do 25% better. If you have 2 acres of food plots, you now just added another 1/2 acre of forage without planting any extra. DO BETTER BEFORE DOING MORE!!!!

From: buzz mc
24-May-17
Interesting, food plots for gators. Who'd of thought? I'd thought itd been easier to kill one next to a chicken farm, but I've never hunted them.

From: writer
24-May-17
Hmmm, I've followed some of Nutritionist' advice and we've yet to see anything but a few doe alligators at our food plots in northeast Kansas. Dunno what we're doing wrong?

From: NY Bowman
24-May-17
Interesting??? Seems some posts are ending up in the wrong place.

I've never even considered a food plot for gators. I'll have to give it some thought?

From: Swampbuck
24-May-17

Swampbuck's embedded Photo
Swampbuck's embedded Photo
My gator plot is ready!!

24-May-17
If I had that much flat land I'd try out one of them gator plots :)

From: Zim
24-May-17
Christ, now I have to watch out for gators in farm fields in Ohio, too?!? Glad I already hung my tree stands so I got somewhere escape to!

From: Steve H.
24-May-17
I'm going to go with my buddies Terry and CamenDon in a couple years when I retire.

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