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Food Plots CULTIPACKER FOOD PLOTTING...

redblood

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Jan 22, 2006
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Really considering going largely to no till option tp expand my foodplotting. have lots of grown over fields that i do not till. was thinking about getting a cultipacker lay down the native forage, then spray it.i know it would need to put the sed down before the cultipacking took place. it be a cheap fall planting for me- rye, wheat or brassicas.


anyone else down this- have you have good luck? would be just the ticket for me roughest ground i feel
 
That's all I do anymore. However, I broadcast the seed before I mow and spray. This gives the seed a good thatch covering. Plus, it increases germination considerably. A lot of seed thrown down onto mowed plants never makes contact with the soil. It lays there in or on top of the thatch. A cultipacker will help with that, but still not as good as seeding first, then mowing and spraying.
 
I didn't know I could do this. I usually spray. When it is good and dead I broadcast seed. Then I mow. I am behind this year. Do you think I could spray it, wait a couple days and broadcast my seed then mow what is left. I would probably fertilize after that. Also, has anyone ever used one of the tractor supply sprayers with wheels that has a boom. Was wondering did they hold up ok or are they junk. I need a new sprayer.
 
the cultipacker acts as a crimper right. wont it smash it down? or is a crimper something different?
No, a cultipacker won't crimp.

I see cultipackers used in "throw-and-mow" applications because they help shake/press the seed down to the soil when the seed was broadcast on top the thatch.
 
I didn't know I could do this. I usually spray. When it is good and dead I broadcast seed. Then I mow. I am behind this year. Do you think I could spray it, wait a couple days and broadcast my seed then mow what is left. I would probably fertilize after that. Also, has anyone ever used one of the tractor supply sprayers with wheels that has a boom. Was wondering did they hold up ok or are they junk. I need a new sprayer.
You can seed first, then mow, then spray. Personally, until I tried it, I didn't think I would get a good kill with the spray if I did it right after mowing. But so far, those worries have been unfounded. I've gotten great kills spraying the day I mowed.
 
But one thing to stress with throw-and-mow: OVERSEED! I use 50% more seed than conventional planting (drilling) calls for. So if drilling calls for 50 lbs/acre, I broadcast 75 lbs/acre. This is to compensate for the lower germination rate of seed in throw-and-mow planting techniques.
 

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