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Food Plots Food plot rookie :)

Mag

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Bought my first piece of land for hunting this Summer. Total of 34 acres, 6-7 of which is open area with two sizable clover plots in place as well as Dunstan Chestnut and Oak saplings planted. This open area is surrounded with woods that have a steep incline to a top ridge where I have done most of my sits and see deer regularly. The surrounding neighboring property is similar, open fields with cattle and thick woods and virtually zero hunting pressure. No main roads.
My dilemma is this...I am seeing little to no activity in the clover plots. Even the neighbor who runs the cattle says he doesn't see many in the fields. I'm wondering if I am being impatient or should I consider planting something else like Soybean?
 
Bought my first piece of land for hunting this Summer. Total of 34 acres, 6-7 of which is open area with two sizable clover plots in place as well as Dunstan Chestnut and Oak saplings planted. This open area is surrounded with woods that have a steep incline to a top ridge where I have done most of my sits and see deer regularly. The surrounding neighboring property is similar, open fields with cattle and thick woods and virtually zero hunting pressure. No main roads.
My dilemma is this...I am seeing little to no activity in the clover plots. Even the neighbor who runs the cattle says he doesn't see many in the fields. I'm wondering if I am being impatient or should I consider planting something else like Soybean?
We always drill wheat in our clover. Our plots are getting hammered, I would be willing to bet it's a pressure thing making them nocturnal. 34 acres can get pressured very fast. I would not get rid of clover to plant soy beans personally.

With the drought this year we played with our fertilizer. And our fertilized plots are getting hit by a big percentage compared to our not fertilized plots.
 
I would never trade a good clover plot for anything else. You can enhance clover by adding wheat and turnips end of august/ first of September. Either hang a camera or put out an exclusion cage to judge how much pressure you are getting from deer. If the plots are too exposed maybe you need som cover or screen to make the deer more comfortable in daytime.
All of our deer seem to have been far more nocturnal this year when compared to recent years.
 
As others have pointed out, a productive perennial clover plot is a wonderful thing to have. Personally, I would monitor the plot 24 hours/day with a trail-camera before deciding the plot is not being utilized. Often, all activity is at night, especially during deer season.

The only time I would convert a perennial plot to an annual one is if food was at an absolute premium. Then I would go with a good warm-season annual followed by a good cool-season annual. In many cases, annuals produce more tonnage of food than perennials do. But if the deer have other food sources available (agriculture, weed fields), then I would stick with the low annual cost of maintaining a good perennial plot rather than the high cost and manpower of two annual plantings per year of an annual plot.
 

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