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Scott
immediately hired Johnson as a consultant and assigned a project: create a
superior deer forage; building on the best qualities of the clover he had
originally tested. Johnson's ultimate mission would be to breed a new
forage variety specifically and exclusively for whitetail deer. As
far as Scott was concerned, the wheels were in motion. He knew there was a
strong niche market for a superior forage planting. He knew other avid
hunters also wanted to plant the best forage, not only to attract more
deer but to potentially grow bigger deer and larger racks as well. With
no business plan in hand and only a desire to know more, Scott purchased a
piece of property adjoining his own land consisting of a residence, a big
horse barn and 50 acres. It wasn't long before computers; phone lines and
office furniture filled the house. Enclosures were built. A greenhouse
appeared and test plots were neatly cultivated. Along
with Dr. Johnson, Randall Rogers, foreman Andy Dixon and new employee
William Cousins, Scott was determined to come up with the best food plot
planting possible for hunters. Because they were dedicated to truly
scientific research and they wanted to benefit all hunters on the
continent, Scott dubbed his facility, the Whitetail Institute of North
America. Scott
was on a crusade. He had hunted in the North and admired the big-bodied,
heavy-racked bucks and taken his share. Deer had made a comeback in the
South but they were on the scrawny side and seemed no match for their
northern cousins at the time. "I
knew I couldn't control genetics, but by golly I could control
harvesting," Scott said. "And I could control nutrition on my
hunting land. And I could choose that nutrition. I was on a quest for the
best deer forage possible." Scott
became so intrigued with the effects of good nutrition; he decided to
conduct a test for his own satisfaction. He obtained permits to transport
19 fawns from Montana and Alberta, Canada and areas famous for big
whitetail. With the help of Delta Airlines, the fawns were transported in
large dog carriers to Montgomery and placed in small pens and bottle-fed.
When they were old enough to eat on their own, they were ear tagged and
combined with an equal number of tagged Alabama fawns. The
fawns ate the very same forage, including free-range browse and a variety
of other plantings as well as the experimental clover blend. It was
observed immediately that the clover formula was the preferred planting. Every
fall, the deer were weighed and the antlers removed and measured. In the
first year, the northern deer were notably larger and the antlers larger
and heavier. "We were shocked and astonished that the gap closed
dramatically the next year," says Scott. This trend continued each
year. The
experience proved to Scott once and for all that deer needed not only good
nutrition to improve body mass and antler size, but age as well. "The
old wisdom, 'once a spike, always a spike' was baloney", says Scott.
"You've got to let them age and you do that with your trigger
finger." In
the meantime, research continued on the clover formula to make it better.
Scott knew he needed a forage that would supply high protein levels - - at
least 16 percent to 18 percent and not just for a season but all through
the year, especially in the critical antler growing and fawning period.
The clover needed to flourish in a wide variety of soils and climates. And
he wanted it to last not just for a year, but also for at least three to
five seasons As
Dr. Johnson worked on the formula, it was tested in small one to two-acre
pens where animals could be contained. The testing was then continued in
larger fenced areas such as the 100-acre enclosure at the Institute.
Finally, the formula was tested on wild deer on a 1,600-acre area in
Alabama and several other test facilities as far North as Canada. When
the test clover made it through the first three stages with good results,
it was moved on to the toughest test. Field testers from all over the
country planted the experimental forage and reported the results back to
the Institute. These field testers showed how well the product worked in
varied climates and in real-life situations. Some
of the first field testers were famous bass fishermen like Hank Parker,
Larry Nixon, Ken Cook and Bill Schroeder. As Scott traveled the country
conducting bass tournaments, he would load up unmarked bags and give them
to the fisherman - - all avid hunters. He would mark "Formula X"
in a heavy black marker on the bags. "Lay
it on the line", said Scott. "Tell me how it works or doesn't work
next to your other planting." Finally
in 1988 after years of research and testing, the small staff knew they had
a product worthy of the Whitetail Institute. Randall Rogers named it
Imperial Whitetail Clover. The new Imperial would change the hit-or-miss
deer nutrition business forever. It
was the product the Institute team had dreamed of, providing critical
protein levels all year long, up to an impressive 30-35 percent. In
addition, deer preferred the Imperial formula by as much as 5:1 over
competitive plots, so that it both attracted and held deer in specific
areas. Plus, a single planting could last up to five years and sometimes
longer without reseeding. As a matter of fact, one test plot Ray planted
in Ontario, Canada is still going strong after eight years and some
field-testers have reported fields lasting 12 years. Dr.
Johnson further customized the formula in regional blends, which made it
appropriate for soils from Canada to Florida. A little later, an
additional clover was added called Golden Jumpstart. This new addition
allows the Imperial blend to establish much quicker, attracting the deer
while the other varieties in the formula take root. Scott
recalls with a smile that a big seed industry executive told him that with
a lot of advertising and marketing he'd be lucky to sell 100,000 pounds
the first year. "After
the first season," says Scott, "We'd sold more than one million pounds". As
use of the Imperial Clover spread across the country, it became more and
more obvious to Scott that hunters were starving for nutritional
information and that education would be critical in growing bigger and
better deer and in improving the hunting experience for outdoorsmen
everywhere. So in 1991 the Institute published the first edition of
Whitetail News, a 12-page annual journal. Today the Whitetail News is
published three times a year and averages 72 or more pages. In
the Whitetail News, the Institute could inform hunters and wildlife
managers not only about using Imperial Clover but other available
plantings as well. The Institute could also put forth responsible and
highly effective deer management techniques, including articles about
selective harvesting, which included letting young bucks walk and
harvesting does. A
20-minute how-to video on producing trophy bucks was also created and
offered to the public for only shipping and handling expenses. Since then,
the first video has been revised and updated several times and now runs
nearly a full hour. The
business was exploding and Imperial Whitetail Clover bags filled the
warehouses. The small staff couldn't handle the volume of business and
requests for information. It was make-or-break time. The Institute could
grow or stand still. In 1990 Scott had
invited his two older sons to invest in the business. Both were
outdoorsmen, both had business degrees and years of marketing experience
under their belt. Fortunately
for Scott, they were ready, willing and able to step up to the plate. The
business more than doubled in the first three years under the Scott
brothers. "I
couldn't have done it without them," says the elder Scott. "And that's not
just father's talk. They put their heart and souls into the business and
built a reputation in the deer nutrition business that is second to none." More
consultants were added to man the phone lines. There was one requirement -
they were all deer hunters who understood the product and understood what
deer hunters wanted and needed. The consultants relayed information from
one customer to another and kept up with the field testers. They built
their own database of what worked best and where and when. An
amazing network of knowledge was created. The feedback from America's
hunters and wildlife managers was fast and furious. The Institute had
discovered the best Research and Development Department possible - their
own customers and field testers. Meanwhile
back in the greenhouse and on the test fields, Dr. Johnson accomplished
the goal Ray Scott had set seven years earlier: a completely new forage
variety and to this day, the only food plot forage genetically developed
specifically for wild, free-ranging whitetail deer. The new forage became
the main component in the Imperial Clover blend. The new Imperial formula
now worked better than ever, even more finely tuned to the unique
nutritional needs of the whitetail deer. After
1991 with the Whitetail News preaching the gospel of nutrition and
responsible management, Steve and Wilson in place, and knowledgeable
consultants on the phone, communication with hunters exploded. With their
fingers on the pulse of America's hunters, the Scott boys had their own
mission defined in no uncertain terms by their own customers: more
nutrition products for more specific circumstances. "The
interest in nutrition and good management was amazing," says Scott. "There
were hunters all over the country who were totally ready to go the extra
mile for good deer herds and good hunting. They were willing to invest
time, effort and money to improve their hunting environment." Not
surprisingly some of the loudest voices were from the many recreational
hunters who did not have enough land, time and equipment to engage in "farming." "They
needed what was essentially a 'quick 'n easy' seed forage," says veteran
hunter Steve Scott. "And I can understand it. Many of our customers have
very small hunting areas and no access to tractors and farming equipment.
We needed to formulate a good seed blend that could literally be 'thrown
on the ground' and still provide a good quality forage." After
several years of intense research and testing, Imperial No-Plow Wildlife
Seed Blend was ready for the market. And it scored big with the hunters
for both whitetail and turkey. "We
really filled a need," says Steve Scott. "And we found a great added
benefit as well. Now hunters could plant hard-to-get-to and hard-to-plant
areas like logging trails, pond dams and small clearings. It added a whole
new dimension to hunting strategies." Steve
continues, " We also were hearing from guys who had soils that were drier
which made perennial plots harder to establish. So we went to work again
and after six years of research and a lot of testing, we developed
Imperial Alfa-Rack. It's a unique alfalfa-clover blend developed
specifically for dry upland soils and well-drained hillsides and hilltops." While
the first seed products were being painstakingly developed, equal
attention was being devoted to mineral and vitamin supplements with the
help of animal nutrition specialist Brent Camp who had over 25 years of
experience in the feed and supplement business for both livestock and
whitetail. With
the addition of Camp, the Institute soon learned that the so-called
vitamin and mineral supplements then available were nothing more than
glorified salt licks and did little to enhance the health of whitetail
deer. As
Wilson Scott explains, "Salt by itself has little to no nutritional value
and can possibly do more harm than good. Too much salt can force deer to
drink more water and fill their stomachs so they don't eat as much of the
important protein-based forage." Convinced
by the many dramatic studies on the importance of minerals and vitamins in
the antler-growing and fawn-rearing process in particular, the Institute
researched and tested various combinations of supplements that would not
only attract whitetail but provide the most critical nutrients as well. It
was this research that led to the introduction of Imperial 30-06
Mineral/Vitamin Supplement in 1991 and in 1995, Imperial 30-06 Plus
Protein. In
1999 the Institute pushed the envelope with a revolutionary Seasonal
Supplement System appropriately called Cutting Edge. It was the brainchild
of Steve Scott and new staff member and nutrition specialist Matt Harper. The
system provided three different formulations of nutritional supplements
designed to match the specific nutrition needs of whitetail at different
times of the year. "Deer
really go through stressful times at different times of the year,"
explains Harper. "They have unique needs in the winter, the rut, the
antler-growing months or in gestation and fawn raising. One size
definitely does not fit all." It
was really the ultimate in nutrition fine-tuning and even Ray Scott
wondered how far hunters would go to improve their deer herd even though
the case for varying supplementation was strong. But
as always, the Institute hunters were eager to try the Cutting Edge
products and began reporting back news of healthier deer, heavier body
weights and bigger racks. The Institute had another winner for deer
hunters and managers. As
the Whitetail Institute of North America enters the new year, it can do so with
much pride about the effect it has had on the improved quality of deer
herds and hunting nationwide. It can also do so with the satisfaction of
having solid proof of improved whitetail. After
educating hunters about good management and by providing deer with a
high-protein diet and nutritional supplements, the results have shown up
in the record books. As a matter of fact, it has been documented by Boone
and Crockett and Pope and Young records that since 1991 the annual,
average number of record-book bucks entered has more than quadrupled. Ray
Scott thinks the facts speak for themselves. "Ask yourself," he says "is
it just coincidence that about 15 years ago we launched the food plot
revolution with Imperial Whitetail Clover and started preaching
responsible herd management to hunters and landowners? I don't think so." And
the Institute is not about to rest on its laurels. "We're still pouring
the dollars to research and development," says Scott. "Everyday we learn
something new or do something a little better. I'll be curious to see the
record-book figures five years from now. There's a new breed of hunters
and land managers out there and they're doing one heck of a job. Our job
is to continue to provide them the best deer nutrition products possible." |
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