Top Banner
(716) 895-7333 www.preferredseed.com Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist
30

(716) 895-7333 Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Dec 16, 2015

Download

Documents

Geoffrey Short
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

(716) 895-7333 www.preferredseed.com

Food Plot Agronomy 101

Installation and Management

Garrett Coleman, CCA

Forage Agronomist

Page 2: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

The Goal

• Grow bigger bucks and keep them in your hunting area– Feed Quality– Feed Throughout the year

• Create a nutritious, DESIREABLE food Source

Page 3: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

What we will Discuss

• What species

• Soil Testing

• Tilling, Fertilizing, and Planting

• What you need to plant a plot

• Management

Page 4: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Forage Production

Page 5: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Species Selection• Spring Seeding Perennial (April and May)

– Clover, Alfalfa, Chicory, Cool Season Grasses, Oats

• Summer Seeding (July to August 15th)– Brassicas, Clover, Alfalfa, Chicory, Cool

Season Grasses, Buckwheat

• Fall Seeding (August 15 – October 10th)– Winter Rye and Winter Wheat

Page 6: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Mixes work best

• Diversity mixes improve performance across area– However mix compatible species– Example:

• Brassicas with slow growing perennials don’t mix.

• Consider weed control– Grasses in a broadleaf mix and vise-versa

Page 7: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Location, Location, Location

• Clear Cut areas

• Old Hay Fields

• Logging Roads

• Pond banks

• Don’t be afraid to try something

Remember Sun, Sun, Sun

Page 8: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Agronomic Considerations

Soil Type and Texture

• Web Soil Survey– http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/app/Home

Page.htm

• Soil Testing

Page 9: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soils

Page 10: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soils

Page 11: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soil Sampling

• Sample to your tillage depth (go to 6 inches) if you don’t know.

• Minimum of 30 cores per sample submitted or 10 cores/acre

• Mix cores in a bucket• Air dry them and send

into the lab

Page 12: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soil Sample Results

• Soil pH– Lime Recommendation

• Fertilizer Recommendation– N-P-K– N = Protein

• Feeding the soil will feed the deer

Sample Kits available

Page 13: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

In the field testing

• Cornell Soil pH test Kit

– Available at your local extension office $12.50 each

– Will quickly give you a liming recommendation

• No fertilizer recommendation

Page 14: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soil pH is the most important

• High precipitation leaches Ca and Mg leaving Acidic soils in NY– Some exceptions of high pH soils in NY

• Low pH ties up nutrients, particularly Phosphorus and Micro Nutrients

• Want to maintain our plot pH at 6.5 to 7.0

• Requires consistent liming in to maintain

• Legumes require high pH for N fixation

Page 15: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Liming

• Virgin soil will require more lime than you can apply in one season– Apply a maximum of 2 tons/acre per application– Patience, will require multiple years of

application

• Recommendations based on 100 ENV– Equivalent Neutralizing Value

Page 16: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Application Rate

• Soil Test Recommends 2 tons/acre of 100% ENV lime

• The feed mill has 83% ENV lime available

• Divide 100 / available lime ENV– 100/83 = 1.2

• Multiply 1.2 X 2 tons/ac = 2.4 tons/acre

Apply 2.4 tons/acre of the 83% ENV lime

Page 17: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Lime Types

• Ag Lime traditional, has to have an ENV number– ENV takes into account Fineness (affects

reaction time) and Purity

• Pelletized lime – finer ground reacts more quickly, (not more potent)– Easier to spread with small equipment– More Expensive

Page 18: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Understanding Fertilizer

• Nitrogen – Phosphate – Potash– Triple 19 19-19-19– % in mix, so if you put 100 lbs/acre of Triple

19 you put down 19 lbs of Nitrogen, 19 lbs of Phosphate, and 19 lbs of Potash

– Most situations on virgin ground apply 200 to 500 lbs per acre of balanced fertilizer

• Don’t worry about being off a few lbs of one nutrient or the other

Page 19: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Understanding Fertilizer

• Avoid putting N on Legumes– Stimulates weeds

• Spread fertilizer and weeds at a half rate in two directions for even coverage

Page 20: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Planting Prep

• Weed Control – Start early– Will require multiple

applications– Spring Apply Early May then

again in June– Ready for Summer Annual

planting– Wait 3 days after spraying

before tilling

Page 21: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Weed Control

• Perennial weeds are easiest to kill in the fall when sinking root reserves– Spray mid September

with a mix of Glyphosate and 2,4 – D

• 2,4-D can’t plant broadleaf crops into it for at least 8 weeks so don’t use in the spring

– Spring will require two apps.

Page 22: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soil Prep

• Seed to Soil Contact• Not rocket science

– Use what you have– Old disc or drags, tow with your truck or

garden tractor– Spin Spreader– Roller– Micro Plots use hand tools

• Rake up debris loosen the top soil

Page 23: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soil Prep

• Goal– Smooth level seed bed

• Consider working in two directions– 45º angles

• Add leveling boards or chains last pass

Page 24: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Soil Prep

• Firm your seed bed

• Burying seed to deep is the biggest reason for failure

Page 25: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Micro Plots

• Done with hand tools– Sprayer– Hand Rake– Spreader– Chain Saw

• Make Sure you have sunlight– Brassicas don’t like shade– Oats, Rye, and some clover or chicory can

handle slight shade

Page 26: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Planting Seed

• Be careful using “Till and Plant Equipment”– Often bury seed

• Broadcasting can work well

• Drills can work well but understand how to set them up

Page 27: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Seeding Depths and Rates

• Check our chart

• The smaller the seed the shallower it should be planted

• Alfalfa, Clover, Chicory, Grass Seed ¼” deep

• Small Grains Rye, Wheat, Oats, Peas ¾”

• Brassicas ¼” – ½” deep

Page 28: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Big Buck Clover Mix

• 45% Jumbo Ladino Clover

• 25% Duration EXTRA Red Clover

• 20% Ivory 2 White Clover

• 10% Oasis Forage Chicory

Palatable perennial mix, keep the pH up and top dress with 0-10-40 or similar

Page 29: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Summer, Fall, & Winter Forage Feast

• 40% Dwarf Essex Forage Rape• 15% Hobson Forage Rape• 15% Bonar Forage Rape• 12% Improved Forage Kale• 9% Appin Turnip• 9% Pasja Hybrid Brassica

Excellent for a kill plot, annual seed mid to late summer most popular mix, graze tops dig bottoms

Page 30: (716) 895-7333  Food Plot Agronomy 101 Installation and Management Garrett Coleman, CCA Forage Agronomist.

Wildlife Meadow Mix

• 30% Jumbo Ladino Clover• 30% Medium Red Clover• 15% Alsike Clover• 10% Creeping Red Fescue• 10% Duo Festulolium• 5% Crown Royale Orchardgrass

• Good for poorer soils and cover as well as feed. Can handle partial shade.