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Feel like a newb asking this but...

416wbymag

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Joined
Sep 13, 2006
Messages
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Location
Hardin Valley
I have roughly 30 acres off airport road in Rockwood. Mostly wooded (maybe 1/2 acre field) Some oaks. Thick stuff nearby. I have soil samples out to UT as I can't seem to get much anything to grow in the field except for the native grasses, I think I need a crap load of lime. Trophy rocks in place for years.

Is there anything (other than corn) that I can do to bring the deer in more often?
 
A food plot is only as good as its security for daylight use and proximity to safe bedding cover. In my experience those criteria are far more critical than what you can grow in it.

To attract/recruit deer to be more regular on your place, you need to provide something they want but can't get anywhere else nearby. That might be any combination of food, water, and cover. If you have enough security and food then you'll inevitably have deer. To what extent is relative to how many the property can support. Each deer eats about 10lbs/day so it doesn't take long for only a handful of deer to really deplete an area quickly. That's why they're so nomadic, especially in forest areas.
 
15 15 15 - 200 lbs per year norm
Clover only needs a small amount of nitrogen to begin then it produces excess nitrogen.
Look for 6-24-24. That's about as good as it gets retail.
I bet your ph is off. But let's wait for the soil test results.
Is there sufficient soil there? Many years ago I hunted in that area and was amazed at the amount of exposed limestone. It was like walking in an old quarry in places. Trees in the cracks and all. I was also close to I40 and the amount of litter and dumping was horrible
 
Clover only needs a small amount of nitrogen to begin then it produces excess nitrogen.
Look for 6-24-24. That's about as good as it gets retail.
I bet your ph is off. But let's wait for the soil test results.
Is there sufficient soil there? Many years ago I hunted in that area and was amazed at the amount of exposed limestone. It was like walking in an old quarry in places. Trees in the cracks and all. I was also close to I40 and the amount of litter and dumping was horrible
I'm 300 acres from catoosa. Dirts there, just can't get much but thin grass.
 
Try the hack and squirt to every tree around the plot that isn't an oak tree. Sounds like you need more sunshine and I bet you need lime. The deer could be overgrazing it as soon as it pops up also. You should put a trail cam on the plot on time lapse mode. If it's only getting a couple hours of direct sunlight then that is probably your issue.
 
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