Catscratch House and Habitat build

The deer are on everything that is just starting. They seem like they’re gonna hit that hard until the browse gets a little juice in it.


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We spent the weekend up in Iowa. They are way behind us, but likely way ahead of you. You have a long winter, short summer.
 
Planted sunflowers this morning. No rain in the foreseeable forecast. Hopefully soil moisture is right. I disced them in instead of dragging. Might work, might not.
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Waded through my main plot. I don't remember everything I put in there but it's awesome at the moment. Rye is waist high, wheat is thigh high, and the clovers are just below knee high.
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Sugar beets are few and far between. Unless more come up it'll basically be a failure for a plot. Don't know if they didn't get buried far enough, soil crusted, too cold, etc.

Corn is looking about the same... few and far between.

Milo looks good though.
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Waded through my main plot. I don't remember everything I put in there but it's awesome at the moment. Rye is waist high, wheat is thigh high, and the clovers are just below knee high.
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Do you mow that plot at any time - or just let it grow to maturity??
 
Do you mow that plot at any time - or just let it grow to maturity??
I'll probably let it grow (I change my mind sometimes though). I like to let the awnless wheat head out. Plus any clover that seeds out is a good thing.
 
Got our family knives tonight. The oldest will get his this weekend as he graduates and moves into his first place. Starting his own life.

The dark hair is turkey beard from the boys and I hunts. The light is from a really blonde yote we trapped together. Rattlesnake rattles from a hunt we did in TX, and various snakes we killed while working cattle or fence. And the front bands are ground Indian flint chips we pick on walks together. Our place produces both black and rose colored flint. Made by a cousin. Lots of sentimental stuff.
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Those clover/grains pics look fantastic! What do you normally do with them after they've run their course for the summer?
 
Those clover/grains pics look fantastic! What do you normally do with them after they've run their course for the summer?
Throw a bunch of wheat and rye seed on it. If I have lots of vegetation the cereals might come up sparse, but they'll get their job done.
 
Do you mow that plot at any time - or just let it grow to maturity??
Old pic Bows but I like it. If I don't mow it'll end up looking like this mid summer.
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Do deer eat the grain plants at that stage, or the clover & other stuff growing lower out of sight?
 
Do deer eat the grain plants at that stage, or the clover & other stuff growing lower out of sight?

They do eat the heads. There'll be a point that they vacuum them up. Kind of fun to watch. They'll turn their head sideways, put the stem in their mouth, then slide up pealing all the seeds off.

They do also spend a lot of time eating the stuff underneath. Just depends on the time of year and what's favorable at the moment. Like a lot of times I have deer in the plots eating grains when it's hot/dry and the other stuff has dried down and gone dormant.


This plot should be active year round for a couple of years, and all I'll need to do is overseed with cereals in the fall... and maybe mow once in a while.
 
They do eat the heads. There'll be a point that they vacuum them up. Kind of fun to watch. They'll turn their head sideways, put the stem in their mouth, then slide up pealing all the seeds off.

They do also spend a lot of time eating the stuff underneath. Just depends on the time of year and what's favorable at the moment. Like a lot of times I have deer in the plots eating grains when it's hot/dry and the other stuff has dried down and gone dormant.


This plot should be active year round for a couple of years, and all I'll need to do is overseed with cereals in the fall... and maybe mow once in a while.

I think there’s a lot of value in having them come in and graze off those wheat heads. I can’t imagine how much extra deer droppings you get outta the critters for those extra weeks of attention.


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I think there’s a lot of value in having them come in and graze off those wheat heads. I can’t imagine how much extra deer droppings you get outta the critters for those extra weeks of attention.


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I need to pay attention and see how long it takes the poo to go away. It certainly doesn't build up. I see lots of dung beetles in the summer rolling around with their balls of it. Wonder how quickly it gets swallowed back up by the soil? Yote crap doesn't stay long except for the hair. I bet the deer stuff is gone quickly.
 
I need to pay attention and see how long it takes the poo to go away. It certainly doesn't build up. I see lots of dung beetles in the summer rolling around with their balls of it. Wonder how quickly it gets swallowed back up by the soil? Yote crap doesn't stay long except for the hair. I bet the deer stuff is gone quickly.
Ok, I had to quick learn the habits of dung beetles. After this quick read, I would bet it lasts longer in terms of usefulness vs being on the soil. If your deer manure is being taken up to 3' below the soil and being eaten and digested and excreted a second time, I'd say you're getting super availability from the nutrients in the dung beetle dung.


If I remember right, the last time you showed us a soil test, your ground is pushing 7% or better organic matter. Am I remembering that correctly?
 
And I'm guessing that's a pretty good sized channel to get a dry deer turd underground?
 
Ok, I had to quick learn the habits of dung beetles. After this quick read, I would bet it lasts longer in terms of usefulness vs being on the soil. If your deer manure is being taken up to 3' below the soil and being eaten and digested and excreted a second time, I'd say you're getting super availability from the nutrients in the dung beetle dung.


If I remember right, the last time you showed us a soil test, your ground is pushing 7% or better organic matter. Am I remembering that correctly?


I think that's right. Probably been 10yrs since I did a soil test, things might have changed since then.

You know... I've watched hundreds of dung beetles on the place and even see them while driving down the highway, but I've never seen one bury a ball. They are the size of a shooter marble so yes, the hole would be pretty big.
 
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