4wanderingeyes
5 year old buck +
I have a lot of left over drywall scraps. I have very little patients to sit and remove the paper from them, but can I still toss it in my food plots? Or what can I do with it all?
Here's a pic showing the greenup difference of the drywall influenced area. One can see the drywall around the trees and then the drainage pattern from them. This is two years after I placed the drywall originally. My guess its the gypsum in the drywall that helped the uptake of nutrients for the clover. My plan is to put down a 200 pounds of granulated
gypsum per acre this spring on my food plots and see what it can do there.View attachment 27415
Here's a pic showing the greenup difference of the drywall influenced area. One can see the drywall around the trees and then the drainage pattern from them. This is two years after I placed the drywall originally. My guess its the gypsum in the drywall that helped the uptake of nutrients for the clover. My plan is to put down a 200 pounds of granulated
gypsum per acre this spring on my food plots and see what it can do there.View attachment 27415
5.9what is your soil pH?
Sounds tempting but what about vole's.. Have you noticed their tunnels underneath.I also use leftover drywall for apple tree weed barriers and it works great.
Yep however discing speeds up the processHmmm I’m a drywall contractor. My crews literally install a couple hundred thousands sheets throughout a typical year. Obviously getting access to drywall is not a problem for me.
So you just throw scraps out in a plot and it eventually disintegrates into the soil?