Right Implement for new pasture/food plot?

   / Right Implement for new pasture/food plot? #1  

kubotal3130

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Feb 5, 2009
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I recently had a 50' x 500' area excavated with all stumps removed and leveled. He is going to put in some gravel for a small tractor road about 10' wide and the rest I would like to plant some type of feed for deer and maybe some corn. There are still some roots and rock and debris mixed in the soil. My questions are:

What is the right implement for cleaning up the soil? (removing rocks and roots) I get confused with disc, harrow, plow, subsoiler. I just saw a used subsoiler in my area for cheap. I have a 7' York rake and 9' backhoe on my Kubota 3130.

What is a good deer feed that grows green and looks nice? (alphalfa?)

Should I mix in some cow/horse manure? He scraped the loam topsoil and now I have a clay/sand mix. I have about 15 yards of topsoil stacked up and he say it should be screened. Can I do that on my own?

Thanks for any advice.
 
   / Right Implement for new pasture/food plot? #2  
Well, I am in the midst of a simular project. I had 81 trees removed, ranging in size from 15' to 30' and trunks from 4" to 8", all in a 4~5 acre field, 90% of them were sweet gums. I had them popped out with a dozer blade and he left them lay. I disposed of the trees and stumps. Next we (the wife and I) cleaned and dug out more root for a month. In late October I used a turning plow and let it sit over the winter. Yes it looked like a complete mess again but what else could we do. This spring I plowed again the opposit direction then used my landscape rake for what seemed like fore ever and raked lots more crap out. Last weekend I disked it twice then raked it again. The roots and rocks seemed to be breeding, but I think we are winning now.
 
   / Right Implement for new pasture/food plot? #4  
There is no easy way to get up roots. As far as rocks go there is an attachment called a "Rockhound" that is used on skid loaders. It does an excellent job of removing rocks and also gives a nice finish to the soil. I planted Ladino clover two years ago. It is doing nicely. Deer love alfalfa but alfalfa has to be reseeded every year or so. A good stand of Ladino clover will last 5-7 years if mowed at the right time. The deer swarmed to the Ladino after it came up. My trail camera told me this.
 
   / Right Implement for new pasture/food plot? #5  
For what you describe a disk may be an implement that will get you by. The topsoil you can screen if you build a little grizzly.

Check at your local seed supply store and see what they have and would recommend. I'd suggest some perennials as otherwise you will have to seed every year.:D

some annuals: Buckwheat, winter rye, peas, beans, oats.

some perennials: alfalfa, clovers, brome, timothy, rye grass
 
   / Right Implement for new pasture/food plot? #6  
Hello,

This thread has been moved to the new Food Plot Forum. :thumbsup:
 

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