Complete Turf Care
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2013
- Messages
- 2,068
- Location
- South Louisiana
- Tractor
- 2022 Kubota Grand L6060 (no loader), 2017 Kubota Grand L6060, 2011 Kubota L5740 HSTC-3, 1997 Kubota M4700
One of my favorite parts of deer hunting was planting the food plots. On my last lease, we had about 16 acres of food plots on a 1250 acre lease.
We never had time to plant summer plots. I would go spray everything with Roundup in mid July, and then go spray again in mid to late August. By late September, or early October, we could just plow once and then broadcast our seed and cover it with a drag.
Spraying was a lot easier, cheaper, and faster than mowing.
One year we did try planting soybeans for the summer and had mixed results. If you do plant soybeans, I suggest finding a 'forage' type soybean that is "Roundup Ready". The forage type will grow a lot taller (up to 6 or 8 feet tall) and faster and might survive heavy grazing by the deer. These soybeans may be hard to find and expensive, but if you gonna plant soybeans, you might as well plant something that has a better chance.
We never had time to plant summer plots. I would go spray everything with Roundup in mid July, and then go spray again in mid to late August. By late September, or early October, we could just plow once and then broadcast our seed and cover it with a drag.
Spraying was a lot easier, cheaper, and faster than mowing.
One year we did try planting soybeans for the summer and had mixed results. If you do plant soybeans, I suggest finding a 'forage' type soybean that is "Roundup Ready". The forage type will grow a lot taller (up to 6 or 8 feet tall) and faster and might survive heavy grazing by the deer. These soybeans may be hard to find and expensive, but if you gonna plant soybeans, you might as well plant something that has a better chance.