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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Food Plots
Best food plot seed
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<blockquote data-quote="Ski" data-source="post: 5929699" data-attributes="member: 20583"><p>Preaching to the choir and I appreciate your words of caution, but I don't really know what else to do. I've tried the no till no drill throw & mow method for a few years now with really high hopes but reality never did meet expectations. It never did produce as well as putting seed directly to soil, and it got worse each year instead of better like I thought it was supposed to. Weeds got worse too. Chems would knock them down but they'd come back with all their buddies. So last year I decided I was done with that experiment. Back to breaking ground for me. It's always worked very well and even though I lose some plants to scorch/drought, it's easy to reseed and fix. I'd try a drill if I could justify the cost, but with the little bit of ground I'm planting it doesn't make sense.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ski, post: 5929699, member: 20583"] Preaching to the choir and I appreciate your words of caution, but I don't really know what else to do. I've tried the no till no drill throw & mow method for a few years now with really high hopes but reality never did meet expectations. It never did produce as well as putting seed directly to soil, and it got worse each year instead of better like I thought it was supposed to. Weeds got worse too. Chems would knock them down but they'd come back with all their buddies. So last year I decided I was done with that experiment. Back to breaking ground for me. It's always worked very well and even though I lose some plants to scorch/drought, it's easy to reseed and fix. I'd try a drill if I could justify the cost, but with the little bit of ground I'm planting it doesn't make sense. [/QUOTE]
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