is there anywhere i can buy certified feed corn? time and resources are my limitations on the food plots. i have a very small area to hunt that i planned to feed. 7 acres
is there anywhere i can buy certified feed corn? time and resources are my limitations on the food plots. i have a very small area to hunt that i planned to feed. 7 acres
Good point.The most game rich country my eyes have ever seen is the Texas hill country. 31,000 sq miles, whitetails, turkeys and exotics running in every direction. I'd guess more corn has been fed to there wildlife than anywhere in the country for the last let's say 30 years. There doing just fine.
Good point. But I didn't read the article so I couldn't say.
Pretty dry in the Texas hill country. It takes moisture to cause mold. Rain and plenty of shade promote mold. Not much of that found there. A 100 pound mound of corn in the hardwoods of tn is much different that from a feeder in direct sunlight in Texas IMO.Good point.
As much as I hate it, the average public is just grossly ignorant. We don't have a lot of hope…..Haha. You must have not read anything, or one of the people I talk about that don't listen or care.
We get about nearly 20" more average rainfall than they do.
Can't explain it to people that don't want to listen. So I won't go any further.
Pretty dry in the Texas hill country. It takes moisture to cause mold. Rain and plenty of shade promote mold. Not much of that found there. A 100 pound mound of corn in the hardwoods of tn is much different that from a feeder in direct sunlight in Texas IMO.
Pretty dry in the Texas hill country. It takes moisture to cause mold. Rain and plenty of shade promote mold. Not much of that found there. A 100 pound mound of corn in the hardwoods of tn is much different that from a feeder in direct sunlight
I understand your point also with the drier climate. There are not many hunters that bait around my neck of the woods anyway. I know I don't can't afford it.Pretty dry in the Texas hill country. It takes moisture to cause mold. Rain and plenty of shade promote mold. Not much of that found there. A 100 pound mound of corn in the hardwoods of tn is much different that from a feeder in direct sunlight in Texas IMO.
That's funnyI understand your point also with the drier climate. There are not many hunters that bait around my neck of the woods anyway. I know I don't can't afford it.
It depends on how long the corn sits in the feeder and relative humidity...so, if i buy "deer corn" from tsc, place it in a broadcast feeder set on timers, will aflatoxin still be an issue? isnt the deer corn certified aflatoxin free? have never done this but was considering it this year. if not feeding with corn, what other feed would you use?
I bet corn hits $15 a bag by this fall. That going to cut down a LOT of baitingThat's funny