Good pictures and a nice looking food plot. Have you bought the kid a rifle yet?
I went back and read the first few pages of this thread. I have a question for you. You said that you put the first 100 pounds of seed on less than an acre. Dio you have a much better stand of wheat on that acre?
Also a comment. If you will put about 50 units of nitrogen (approximately 150 lb ammonium nitrate) per acre, that wheat will really green up, be much more palatable to the deer, and will make a bunch of seed heads to keep the deer coming through the soring and early summer. Some say that deer don't eat wheat seed heads, but I know from recent experience that they do. It will also make wonderful nesting habitat for quail, too. Without herbicide, it will grow up in a mixture of wheat and native weeds and grasses, which isn't necessarily bad. With herbicide, the wheat will be much cleaner, which is good also. In other words, it is a win/win situation. (I really hate that term, so why am I using it?)
I sowed this field in Oct. 05 with about 125 lb of wheat seed, and harrowed it in. This is what it looked like in June 06. The brown you see is wheat maturing, and the green is Summer weeds just coming up.
This is what it looked like two weeks ago Feb 07. I did not put herbicide down, but did apply about 50 units of nitrogen. Many of the weeds are common ragweed, which is good for quail. I'll probably let this part of the field continue to grow naturally for another year, when I'll start with the same rotation.
Just to give you an idea what to expect. I did not have enough seed heads left to harrow in and re-seed. The deer ate them all up through the summer.
Mark