I'll keep an eye on usage and see if it matters any, IF I can get the deer to eat it at all! I just really had high hopes that the AWP would be a strong enough draw to compete with the other ag crops during hunting season. Looks like I will just stick with my spring soybean/corn and fall overseeding of cereal grains/brassica plan. At least I have food should things get bad, I am curious about what things look like come spring.Looks like the fertilizer definitely helped the brassicas.
wonder if the deer might use those more/first. Even though you have picky eaters....
you got a lot more deer than I do, and I have 100's of acres of ag (corn, beans and forage crops) all around me. I can grow small 1/2 and 1/4 acre plots of soybeans without any protection (me or the beans) and they will grow and produce grain. I then will broadcast some turnips and wheat/rye over it once it dries down. I think I will just go back to row planting my beans on roughly 15" centers come spring and then broadcast a turnip wheat/rye, annual clover mix come time when the beans start to yellow. That is the tried and true for me...as long as everything goes to plan. Beans are also less work/$$ seed and fertilizer wise as well. I just plant typical ag beans for my area. I get year old seed for like $30 a bag.I planted soy beans, sunflowers, brassicas, rye and oats in September. Everything sprouted. The deer didn’t let the beans or sun flowers get more than 4 inches tall, then they wiped out the brassica greens. Maybe throw some of those in the mix next year to get them munching.
Here in farm country we tend to see very "hard" edges. In many cases the woods but right up to the ag fields. Buffer areas like this can be a great way to add additional edge, provide a different habitat type and help small game animals like rabbits and quail. In areas like mine where we lack cover....I have to do what I can. AND...this is CRP so I get paid to do this (as this was formerly row crop ground).I like the goldenrod, switch transition. Like you said “edge”. Any edge it sometimes seems.
It is...but that was planned. That area has a shallow top soil and wants to erode so I wanted a solid root system in that area. I also don't want the deer that close to the box blind. I have a path thru that area that connects my plot you see in the pic and my orchard plot. The deer use this little path a lot. We only gun hunt from the box blind (I never intended to bow hunt from it) so it's a comfortable 50~75 yard shot and with a solid rest to shoot from. Great set-up for the kids. One of the few areas I can access that I don't bump many deer when I do it. And it will get better as I plan on planting a wall of MG along the leading edge of the switch up by the blind to hide our movements and entry/exit. We hunt this blind when the wind comes form the plot area and blows toward the blind and then out into roughly 20 acres of row drop field.And those weeds and switch under the box seem crazy thick..
Part of it is the picture angle I think...we are looking up hill to some extent so I think it may look thicker than it is. As we are looking thru it and not down into it. But nothing in there other than switchgrass and native weeds that I am aware of.Posted at the same time...
But I’m still curious what’s in there besides switch. It may be a picture thing but that looks dense.
You have to pick your way thru it, but certainly not impossible. My plan was to simply make it a struggle and then offer a path of less resistance and for once.....it seemed to work.Gotcha, it just looks impenetrable in that pic.