Turkey and Foul Food Plots. Checkout our facebook page

Similar documents
Warm Season Perennial Grasses for Forage in Kentucky

PLANTING GUIDE TO GRASSES AND LEGUMES

FOOD PLOT SEED REFERENCE GUIDE

PLANTING GUIDE TO GRASSES AND LEGUMES

Information Note Choosing a Cover Crop. Crimson Clover

REQUIREMENTS FOR SUCCESSFUL ALFALFA ESTABLISHMENT

A. E. ALDOUS GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS

Step 1: Equipment. Step 2: Choosing the Site

Kansas State Agricultural College SWEET CLOVER.

Unit D: Fruit and Vegetable Crop Production. Lesson 1: Planning and Preparing a Vegetable Garden Site

Dryland Grasses and Misc. Forages

Food Plot Seed. About Brier Ridge

Producing and Scavenging Nitrogen with Cover Crops

LAWN RENOVATION & OVERSEEDING

CRP Conversion: Missouri

Recommended Resources: The following resources may be useful in teaching this

Renegade Red Clover. Trifolium pratense. Seed agronomy table

Arkansas Agronomy Technical Note 1 Conservation Practice Seeding Recommendations February 1, 2014

Wildlife Food Plots Equipment and Installation Mark Landefeld, Ohio State University Extension Clif Little, Ohio State University Extension

Performance of 18 Cover Crop Species in a Newly Planted Vineyard in Lake County by Glenn McGourty, Steve Tylicki, Julie Price, and Jim Nosera

Understanding and Building Your Soil Health

LAWNS Chapter 12. Topic Outline. Establishing a Lawn. Establishing a Lawn

PREPLANT COVER CROPS FOR STRAWBERRIES

Rajah Red Clover. Trifolium pratense. Seed agronomy table

Winter Canola Production in Oklahoma. Heath Sanders Extension Assistant (Winter Canola) Oklahoma State University

and Extension Ag & Natural Resources Agent. I am seeing a LOT of crabgrass, and foxtail too

Evaluating Hay and Pasture Stands by Dennis Brown

Plant Science Merit Badge Workbook

Annual YEGRASS. Without Question... the Finest Choice for Rapid Economical Turf and Nutritious Livestock Pasture. RAnnual & Gulf Annual

MOWING AND WILDLIFE: MANAGING OPEN SPACE FOR WILDLIFE SPECIES

Sam Turner Agronomist B.T. Loftus Ranches, Inc.

Soil and Plant Basics 2016 EKS Grazing School September 20, 2016

Getting the Most out of Your Strawberry Soil Test Report. General Information

SAMPLING FOR PLANT ANALYSIS. K.A. Kelling, S.M. Combs, and J.B. Peters

Selecting the Right Turf Varieties. Charles Schuster Extension Educator University of Maryland Extension

Sprigging Bermudagrass

& Tips for Habitat Improvement. Wild Turkey Biologist, Pennsylvania Game Commission

Conservation Cover - 327

Brian Arnall Oklahoma State Univ. Dept. Plant and Soil Science

CALIFORNIA NATIVE GRASSES ON LEVEES

Alfalfa and Cool-Season Clovers 1

Southern Belle and Cherokee Red Clover in Florida 1

Few things are more reassuring than green chicory paddocks in high summer when grass is wilting.

Asparagus (Asparagus officinalis) is a

King s Agriseeds - Designing Cover Crop programs for your farming system. Proven Mixtures, Diverse Species, Experienced Support. Summer Cover Crops

Young trees grow best with clean culture under the

Farmer experiences with increasing Legume. Warwick Lissaman, Breach Oak, Seddon. Balansa Clover

SOIL TEST NOTES. Applying Lime to Established Lawns

Hollywood Management Guidelines

EC Building a Bluegrass Lawn

IPM Fun with Insects, Weeds and the Environment. Lesson #3 Weed IPM. The New York State Integrated Pest Management Program

CMG GardenNotes #244 Cover Crops and Green Manure Crops

Tips for Early and Late Season Vegetable Gardening

Preparing Your Lawn for Spring and Summer. Pedro Perdomo Nisso America, Inc. HGS March

Fall Vegetable Gardening

SEED lacrosseseed.com Native Restoration Guidelines

This is Gardening with Chuck on 1420 KJCK, I m Chuck Otte, Geary County, K-State Research

Demonstrate that inoculation can increase the yield of legumes.

Cover Crop Basics. Jim Stute Rock County UW-Extension

Getting Started with Your Vegetable Garden

Untbersrttp of &tt?ona. SUDAN GRASS IN ARIZONA By R. S. HAWKINS, Assistant Agronomist

Grass Species and Fertilization Practices to Minimize Negative Effects of Lawns. Dr. Rebecca Brown University of Rhode Island

Inherent Factors Affecting Soil ph. Soil ph Management

CHOICE CHICORY GUIDE FOR LAMB FINISHING

Virginia Cooperative Extension- York County

A Beginner s Guide to Vegetable Gardening in Kentucky Plans and Preparations

Pruning Grapes. Establishment pruning Pruning mature vines Goal: to fill the trellis system as quickly as possible.

EB1034 FERTILIZING LANDSCAPE TREES AND SHRUBS

Grasses. Bread grass (Brachiaria brizantha) Warning: Recommended varieties: Karanga, Serengeti 1, Marendu (CIAT 6780) 1,2

Nutrient Management of Irrigated Alfalfa and Timothy

Capital Area Ag Report August 21, 2014

How Lawns Grow- Growing Your Lawn and Not the Bay! Chuck Schuster Extension Educator University of Maryland Extension

Spring Turf Care. Pedro Perdomo Nisso America, Inc. HGS March

Emily Herring Pender County Livestock Agent

Urban Park Management Webinar Series

1 Grasses and grazing

Best Management Practices

Best Vegetable Garden Ever. C Compost will improve your soil C Calendar to plan your garden C Consistency in your care

Lawn Problems and How to Fix Them. Pedro Perdomo Nisso America, Inc. HGS March

Proliant TM. Plant Growth Regulator. Water Soluble Granule

Executive Sun Mix For the Executive look we all desire

Horticulture 2019 Newsletter

RHODES GRASS (Chloris Gayana) A BETTER PASTURE FOR THE TROPICS

Retail Cost $ tax

USDA in the midwest many years ago to help control aphids, which they do very well.

MEASURE AND MANAGE. Plant Sampling and Testing Information

Handouts: MontGuide Can I Grow That Here? MontGuide Planting a Successful Home Vegetable Garden MontGuide Hotbeds and Cold Frames for

Chapter 4 - Lawn establishment

Wildlife Food Plot Project

Grassland. Grassland Food Web

These are non-living factors that influence the performance of a crop. Ex. Climate, weather, soil type, soil fertility, etc.

Resource Guide for Honey Bee Forage Crops

New Planting. A&L Canada Laboratories Small Fruit News Letter Vol. 3 April 17, application should be at a 90 o direction to the row direction.

SOD INSTALLATION AND CARE GUIDE. Over 40 Years of QUALITY SOD & QUALITY SERVICE. Delivery, Installation & Pick-Up

LAWN MAKEOVER WORKBOOK APPENDICES. What Works, What Doesn t To Help Residents Achieve Beautiful, Eco-Friendly Lawns

James R Martin Extension Weed Science Specialist University of Kentucky

A&L Canada Laboratories Inc.

A water dispersible granule formulation containing 75% w/w amidosulfuron, a sulfonylurea.

RGO Sales North Battleford, SK

Unit D: Controlling Pests and Diseases in the Orchard. Lesson 4: Identify and Control Weeds in the Orchard

Transcription:

Turkey and Foul Food Plots Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist Checkout our facebook page 1

Food or Cover Birds needs nesting area and food sources Most are grain crops that birds like best Getting these grains to maturity is hard May need fencing to keep deer out Millets Handle variable soils Ducks Love Japanese Millet Pearl Millet 2

Sorghum Also known as Milo Grain crop used in cheerios and to make malasses Corn BMR 84 Greenleaf Corn 50 lb bag Plant in rows 1 bag to 2.5 acres Low ear set Turkey and Geese, like seedling Untreated 3

Small Grains Spring Ok on somewhat poorly drained ground Handles lower ph, like 5.5 Great introductory crop to get a plot established Need sun Primarily Oats Spring Triticale gaining popularity Small Grains Spring Barley, Oats, Triticale Plant them up to 1 in deep, early spring Get the weeds controlled before you plant them and let them out grow them Fertilize with a balanced fertilizer at planting, i.e. 200 lbs/ac of Triple 15 Use a grain oat, barley for turkeys 4

Buck Chew 32% Preferred Forage Oats 30% Triticale 20% Barley 15% Enhancer Italian Ryegrass 3% Crimson Clover A quick growing mix of small grains, high sugar ryegrass, and Crimson Clover Great option for first year plot. Buckwheat Handles tough ground but likes well drained Plant 4 th of July Plant 1 2 deep Plant 50 lbs per acre Will respond to fertilizer Grain set 60 days after planting 5

195 GT1 Soybeans 6

Glyphosate Tolerant We know have Glyphosate Tolerant bean Plant at 1.5 bags per acre Plant 1 inch deep Excellent dual-purpose grain or forage Tall bean with lots of pods 195 GT1 Soybeans Late fall pods will shatter dropping beans so the birds can get them 7

Soybeans Deer love them. Biggest Problem overgrazed and kill them early Woodchucks eat them too Insects like them Turkey s will graze the insects Will eat beans when drop Provides early to mid summer grazing if get established Good feed when young Will only eat the leaves when old Soybeans Prefer well drained soils with a high ph 6.5 or better Fertilize with N if put on lower ph soils Likes full sun 2X Inoculate the seed, small packages available 8

Soybeans Plant ½ to 1 deep, big seed that needs covered Plant into warm soils Late May, early June Roundup Ready grain type beans available but should not be used in food plots May need to fence them off to get established Chufa Same as yellow nutsedge lots around natively Nut at the base of the plant Turkey eat the nut Likes wet soils 9

Turkey like Clovers and Legumes Attract tons of bugs Red Clovers Medium Type Upright growth high yields Crimson Clover Short lived, hardy Berseem Clover Annual quick growing, does not handle drought well White Clovers Ladino Palatable, more upright than other white clovers White Lower growing better spreading via stolons Red Clovers Medium Type Upright growth high yields Crimson Clover Short lived, hardy Quick growing Should winter kill Was cheap now more expensive 10

Game Bird Buffet Great Cover and Feed 25% Grain Sorghum (Milo) 25% Dwarf Sunflower 20% Japanese Millet 15% Dwarf Corn 15% Buckwheat Seed at 20 lbs/acre in late spring Add a balanced fertilizer Agronomy Behind Food Plots Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist 11

Starts with a Seedling Keys to starting Good seed to soil contact Sun and Water Remember Sun Get it to take off Fertility Weed control All comes from the Soil Soil Type and Texture know what you have Soil maps online- Web Soil Survey http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/app/home Page.htm Soil Testing 12

Soils Soils 13

Soil Sampling Sample to your tillage depth (go to 6 inches) if you don t know. Minimum of 30 cores per sample submitted or 10 cores/acre Mix cores in a bucket Air dry them and send into the lab Soil Sample Results Soil ph Lime Recommendation Fertilizer Recommendation N-P-K N = Protein Feeding the soil will feed the deer Sample Kits available 14

In the field testing Cornell Soil ph test Kit Available at your local extension office $15 each Will quickly give you a liming recommendation No fertilizer recommendation Soil ph is the most important High precipitation leaches Ca and Mg leaving Acidic soils in NY Some exceptions of high ph soils in NY Low ph ties up nutrients Want to maintain our plot ph at 6.5 to 7.0 Requires consistent liming in to maintain Legumes require high ph for N fixation 15

Liming Virgin soil will require more lime than you can apply in one season Apply a maximum of 2 tons/acre per application Patients, will require multiple years of application Recommendations based on 100 ENV Equivalent Neutralizing Value Lime Types Ag Lime, has to have an ENV number ENV takes into account Fineness (affects reaction time) and Purity Pelletized lime finer ground reacts more quickly, (not more potent) Easier to spread with small equipment 16

Application Rate Soil Test Recommends 2 tons/acre of 100% ENV lime The feed mill has 83% ENV lime available Divide 100 / available lime ENV 100/83 = 1.2 Multiply 1.2 X 2 tons/ac = 2.4 tons/acre Apply 2.4 tons/acre of the 83% ENV lime Fertilize The Soil Avoid putting N on Legumes Stimulates weeds Spread fertilizer and seeds at a half rate in two directions for even coverage 17

Understanding Fertilizer Nitrogen Phosphate Potash Triple 15 15-15-15 % in mix, so if you put 100 lbs/acre of Triple 15 you put down 15 lbs of Nitrogen, 15 lbs of Phosphate, and 15 lbs of Potash Don t worry about being off a few lbs of one nutrient or the other Weed Control Most Important Weed Control Start early Will require multiple applications Wait 3 days after spraying before tilling for Glyphosate Using annuals work best for first time plots 18

Weed Control Perennial weeds are easiest to kill in the fall when sinking root reserves Spray mid September with a mix of Glyphosate and 2,4 D 2,4-D can t plant broadleaf crops into it for at least 8 weeks so don t use in the spring Spring will require two apps. Clipping or Mowing Can be done to control annual weeds in perennial plots, like clover plots Good to clip if gets ahead of the deer New re-growth is more palatable 19

Soil Prep Start with clean area, weed free Seed to Soil Contact Use what you have Old disc or drags, tow with your truck or garden tractor Spin Spreader Roller Micro Plots use hand tools Rake up debris loosen the top soil Soil Prep Goal Smooth level seed bed Consider working in two directions 45º angles Add leveling boards or chains last pass 20

Soil Prep Firm your seed bed Burying seed to deep is the biggest reason for failure Micro Plots Done with hand tools Sprayer Hand Rake Spreader Chain Saw Weed eater Make Sure you have sunlight Brassicas don t like shade Oats, Rye, and some clover or chicory can handle slight shade 21

Planting Seed Be careful using Till and Plant Equipment Often bury seed Broadcasting can work well Drills can work well but understand how to set them up Seeding Depths and Rates Check our chart The smaller the seed the shallower it should be planted Alfalfa, Clover, Chicory, Grass Seed ¼ deep Small Grains Rye, Wheat, Oats, Peas ¾ Brassicas ¼ ½ deep 22

Mixes work best Diverse mixes improve performance across area However mix compatible species Example: Brassicas with slow growing perennials don t mix. Match life cycles and seeding times Consider weed control Grasses in a broadleaf mix and vise-versa Plot Location Rule #1 Sun, Sun, Sun Clear Cut areas Old Hay Fields Logging Roads Pond banks Don t be afraid to try something 23

Intensive Plot Managment Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist (716) 895-7333 www.preferredseed.com Perennial Species Most Clovers, Alfalfa, cool season grasses Grow multiple years Requires less establishment labor, but more maintenance fertility. Annual Species Oats, Winter Rye, Wheat, Corn Soybeans, Brassicas Grow one year, or part of two years (winter grains) Requires more seeding labor, but less maintenance fertility. 24

Seeding Times Spring Seeding (April and May) Clover, Alfalfa, Chicory, Grasses, Oats Summer Seeding (July to August 1st) Brassicas, Buckwheat Late Summer Seeding (August 1 st -15 th ) Clover, Alfalfa, Chicory, Grasses Fall Seeding (August 15 October 10 th ) Winter Rye and Winter Wheat, Austrian Winter Peas, Winter Triticale Forage Production Through the Year Need multiple plots to feed through year Multiple Species 25

Year 1 March April May June July August September Soil Test and lime all plots Spread Lime again if needed Plot 1 Seed Buck Chew Mow Buck Chew Seed Forage Feast Brassica Plot 2 Plant Soybeans Plant Winter Triticale Plot 3 Mow Plot Frost Seed Clover Mow Clover and Grass Plot 4 Plant Game Bird Buffet Froze ground easy to spread on Year 2 March April May June July August September Plot 1 Plant Soybeans Plant Winter Triticale with Austrian Winter Pea Plot 2 Frost Seed Clover into the Winter Triticale Mow Triticale clover growing Top Dress Clover Fertilizer Plot 3 Mow Clover and Grass Spray with Glyphosate Kill Plot Plot 4 Seed Buck Chew Mow Buck Chew Seed Brassica and Crimson Clover 26

Frost Seeding Improves Stand Yield and Quality Timing and weather is everything Lot of luck Keys to success Remove existing forage Mob graze or mow short Drag Mat Keep stand grazed short Establishment Frost seeding More reliable than we thought Virginia Tech Study Compares frost seeding with no-till drilling into an existing stand Frost seeded Feb 2009 No-Till Drilled March 2009 Grazed heavy in spring 27

Results Both methods worked to establish Red and White Clover into an existing grass pasture 8 lbs/acre of clover seeded 4 lbs Red, 2 lbs White, 2 lbs Ladino Frost seeding established more plants earlier 11/sq ft vs 6/sq ft for no-till drilling in spring By August both methods had similar yield and stand counts 15% of total forage yield, about 2.5 tons DM/acre Significant Increase Frost Seeding Excellent to establish clover Good for Orchardgrass, Perennial Ryegrass, Italian Ryegrass, and Festulolium Pasture Refresher mix great for horse or livestock meadows Don t forget to fertilize 28

Red Clovers Medium Type Upright growth high yields Crimson Clover Short lived, hardy Berseem Clover Annual quick growing, does not handle drought well Clovers White Clovers Ladino Palatable, more upright than other white clovers White Lower growing better spreading via stolons Red Clovers Medium Type Upright growth high yields Crimson Clover Short lived, hardy Quick growing Should winter kill Was cheap now more expensive 29

Deer Love Clover More digestible than alfalfa More undegradable protein Survives ensiling Bypass protein Handles more variable soils When do deer utilize Clover? Early Spring through mid summer High protein, moderate energy levels Great building block forage Handles drought fairly well 30

Clover Placement Moderately well drained to well drained soils Will handle some wet ness but not a lot Need full sun High ph soils Timing Clover Seeding Frost Seeding late winter early spring (March) Only into established stands Spring Seeding Perennial (April and May) Late Summer Seeding (August 1 st -15 th ) Plant shallow don t bury seed to deep only ¼ 3/8, or broadcast and pack on the surface Seed bed should be firm 2X inoculate 31

Clover Management Starts out easy being frost seeded Can be seeded under forage oats Weed control, erosion control Clip out annual weeds Broadleaf weeds are hard to control with spray Clip to keep the forage fresh, new growth Spray out grasses pretty easy in clover Clover Management Maintain ph Lime the year before planting, then annually Maintain Potash levels N-P-K (Potash is K) Overseed annually Old farmers would say the key to a long lived clover plot is frost seeding every year. Clovers are only 2 or 3 year life cycle in the northeast 32

Big Buck Clover Mix 45% Jumbo Ladino Clover 25% Wildcate Red Clover 20% Ivory 2 White Clover 10% Oasis Forage Chicory Palatable perennial mix, keep the ph up and top dress with 0-10-40 or similar Alfalfa Needs very well drained soils Gravels is about the only place in northeast Needs higher ph then clover Handles drought better than anything else Desert plant Management the same as clover generally Feed quality is good but not necessarily better then clover 33

Chicory Highly palatable perennial forage Place in a mix, with clover works best Prefers moderate to well drained soils Chicory Seeding Small seed only spread on surface in a firm seed bed Works best planted in spring (April or May) 34

Chicory Management Clip to avoid bolting Shoot with head on it Fertilize like alfalfa or clover, along with 35 lbs of N per harvest (3 times a year) Early spring growth excellent quality, very palatable Deer graze spring to mid summer Peas Field Peas Quick growing Winter Kill Work well with oats Austrian Winter Peas Over winter good to mix with small grains Summer seeded need good soil coverage for germination 35

Perennial Grasses Placement Handles variable soils Persistent and easy to manage Planting Time Sow in spring, April or May Sow in Fall August to Mid September Perennial Grasses Fertilize every spring with a balanced fertilizer, like Triple 15, 15-15-15 Fertilize again early summer (June) after you clip it with Nitrogen fertilizer, such as Urea or Ammonium Sulfate Protein content will be affected by N fertilizer 36

Perennial Grasses Clip every month and keep new growth coming Graze spring to early summer, than again in early fall There are a lot of grass fields to compete with To attract deer, other species work better Poor conditions at least you have something growing Wildlife Meadow Mix 30% Jumbo Ladino Clover 30% Medium Red Clover 15% Alsike Clover 10% Creeping Red Fescue 10% Duo Festulolium 5% Crown Royale Orchardgrass Good for poorer soils and cover as well as feed. Can handle partial shade. 37

Annual Grasses Enhancer Italian Ryegrass Higher Sugar Content Increased gain on cows Very Palatable 38

Utilize farmer fields Corn Maybe buy an acre of standing corn to leave for the season Deer will hit late in the year, during hunting season Needs full sun, high fertility, does not perform well in most deer plots Forage Soybeans Prefer well drained soils with a high ph 6.5 or better Fertilize with N if put on lower ph soils Likes full sun 2X Inoculate the seed, small packages available 39

Forage Soybeans Plant ½ to 1 deep, big seed that needs covered Plant into warm soils Late May, early June Roundup Ready grain type beans available but should not be used in food plots May need to fence them off to get established Forage Soybeans Deer love them. Biggest Problem overgrazed and kill the Provides early to mid summer grazing if get established Good feed when young Will only eat the leaves when old Field Peas essentially the same management except you plant early spring in cooler soils 40

Deer Grazing Spring Grains Graze them when they are young By mid summer will avoid them May come back and get the grain if left out Can plant forage oats in the fall, but they all will die in the first cold spell 41

Small Grains - Winter Winter Wheat, Winter Rye, Winter Triticale Like well drained ground but will grow on poor ground with low ph, Don t like have wet feet going into fall Planting Small Grains - Winter Plant early September Sow ½ to 1 deep Plant at a heavy rate 110 150 lbs/acre Fertilize at planting with a balanced fertilizer 42

Management Winter Small Grains Top dress in early spring with 50 units of N right after green up Spray with 2,4-D or Dicamba to clean up broadleaves in the spring If it heads on you mow it and move onto something else Works well to rotate to brassicas the first year or seed clover in late summer Grazing Winter Small Grains Deer graze late fall or early winter and then again in early spring. When it gets mature and starts heading they will not eat it Mowing after it heads will leave volunteer grains coming in May attracted turkeys Can also mix winter grains with Austrian Winter Peas, tend to attract deer better. 43

Brassicas Place on well drained soils with good fertility Need sun Works best planted mid-summer (July August 15 th) Early plantings don t promote tuber growth or fall feeding Brassicas Seeding Spray or work the ground to get rid of all existing vegetation Broadcast or drill shallow, only ¼ ½ deep Cultipack seed in Incorporate fertilizer at planting, 100 lbs/acre of Triple 15, and 100 lbs/acre of Urea, or 200 lbs/acre of 20-10-10 44

Nitrogen Fert. No Nitrogen Diakon Forage Radish Cover Crop Use Break up Ground Great for new plots Graze tops dig tubers Plant in August Penetrator Radish Groundhog Radish 45

Brassica Feeding Will feed on the tops until the tubers freeze Tops are one of the few things growing fresh in late summer Late fall they will dig roots and tubers after they freeze 46

Summer, Fall, & Winter Forage Feast 40% Dwarf Essex Forage Rape 15% Hobson Forage Rape 15% Bonar Forage Rape 9% Appin Turnip 9% Pasja Hybrid Turnip 6% Maris Kestrel Kale 6% Caledonian Kale Excellent for a kill plot, annual seed mid to late summer most popular mix, graze tops dig bottoms 47

Balanced Approach KFF Keep Food Fresh Always have a fresh food source Mow clover and grass stands on a regular basis to promote new growth Multiple plots work better than one monoculture Mixed Cover Penetrator Radish with Crimson Clover Seed 17 lbs/acre 5 lbs radish 12 lbs clover 48

Thank you 49