Desirable & High Yield For Small Plots

Are you 4500 miles from your property? If that is true, I would consider a camera that provides updates to keep you informed.

I am. I've considered trail cams that provide updates but don't really want a ton of text messages flowing in all the time. It's like Christmas every time I get my hands on a camera that's been soaking for a few months.
 
I am in Central PA. I have .10 and .40 acre plots. I just put lime down and I'm estimating a ph of around 6 by spring. What would be the most desirable & high yield plant(s) I could put in these little plots. I will fertilize as needed and I have a tractor and some equipment. Anything other than clover for small plots?
Your deer density will have a bearing on what forage you should choose. Small plots and high DPSM makes a lot of forages out of the question unless you are willing to fence it. Sunflowers, peas, beans are almost impossible to grow in small plots with even moderate deer numbers without a fence.
I started fencing 1 acre plots a few years ago in order to plant mostly sunflowers and a few other candies mixed in. I enjoy it. After the annual plot has matured in mid summer, I remove the fence and let 'em eat. I then over seed rye, clover and brassica into the plot. With that rotation, I produce about as much year-round tonnage as I can on a given acre.
 
Also keep in mind that "high yield" is important to farmers but not so much to food plotters. For small plots, browse tolerance is much more important. On component of trying to improve the local herd health in a measurable way is providing food for deer, but in order for this to be a reasonable objective, you need scale. That is ownership, control, or significant influence on the entire home range of deer. That home range varies but 1,000 acres is a good ball park. We are talking about converting 1%-3% of that to quality food. Since food plots are as small fraction of a deer's diet, having food available during stress periods when nature is stingy is more important by far than yield in a farming sense.

Most folks planting small plots can't reasonably feed deer. A reasonable objective for small plots is having a level of attraction and making a property more huntable with better predictability of deer movements. Attraction is a balance. Foods that are highly desirable are often wiped out in small plots. Temporary E-fencing as Tap points out is one strategy. Choosing browse tolerant plants are another. Many desirable plants become much more browse tolerant when well established. RR Forage soybeans are an example. If the objective is not feeding deer during stress periods but attracting them during an early archery season, fencing forage beans can be quite effective. Even a single acre is hard for deer to wipe out if they are 6' tall when the e-fence is removed.

Thanks,

Jack
 
Can you identify other browse tolerant species?
 
Can you identify other browse tolerant species?
Several species are browse tolerant when given the chance to get establish. Forage beans are a good choice for a summer annual once the get established. But deer will destroy a newly planted plot.
Clover and chicory are browse tolerant. Collards are new to me, but they are supposed to be a highly browse and cold tolerant brassica.
Sunn Hemp is another browse tolerant summer forage. I planted it last year for the 1st time. It's very competitive and regrowth is good after browsing and it will not survive frost or reseed in the north.

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What tap said plus cereal grain. Deer in my area don't touch milo (grain sorghum) until the seed heads mature and then they hammer the seed heads.
 
Thanks. Anybody else?
 
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