Brian Moore – Arkansas
We’ve spent several
years on our lease in Southwest Arkansas trying to find the right
combination that would unlock the door to great food plots. Every year
we would try some of the same habitual mixes of clover and oats, and
so through the expense of preparing the seedbed year after year. We
have always held more than our fair share of deer on our property
through the utilization of these plots, but the time to make a change
was sneaking up on us. We wanted to find a better “mousetrap” that
would not only keep deer on our lease but also add some good
nutritional value as well.
Last summer we began
to look at some of the major players in the production of seed and see
what they had to offer that might fit our situation. One of the
problems we have is control of pH levels – more specifically, getting
lime trucks to our remote plots. When we tested our plots a couple
years ago, the pH was about 5.7, and it would be very expensive and
labor intensive to buy bagged lime to apply to those plots. This is
what sparked my interest in one of the Whitetail Institute’s newer
seed blends, Imperial Whitetail Extreme. With this new blend coming
from a “tried-and-true” company, I knew that it had to be something
that was rigorously tested and patiently re-tested over a substantial
period of time. When the Institute’s Chris Eubanks addressed all my
concerns and answered all my questions, we placed our order.
Per Chris’ advice, and
following the detailed instructions provided, we put our seed in the
ground in late September. I decided at that point to give another new
product a try, Plot Saver. I wanted to baby one acre that was separate
from the other plots. So I thought I would give this product a test as
well. Just a few days after our seed was in the ground, we were
blessed with just the right amount of rain, followed by a few mild
days of sunshine. In what seemed like overnight, small little green
plants began to break the ground, and so our first venture with a
perennial had begun.
Mid-October arrived
quickly, more rain fell, and the young plants began to thrive. We
noticed very early that the deer were beginning to use the large plot,
nibbling the plants at a pretty good rate. They were plants that our
deer herd had never tasted before, but they seemed to really enjoy
them – much more than the old mixes of clover and oats. The smaller
one-acre plot was not utilized at all, meaning the Plot Saver was
doing its job as well, and the plants were really coming up
beautifully. Thirty days later this plot was given to the deer, and
they had no mercy on it at all!
There is one important
factor that must be mentioned here. We had an unbelievable white oak acorn
crop on our lease this past season, and never before have the deer hit our
food plots that early in the season with that kind of mast. I would never
have dreamed that deer would walk by white oak acorns to feed in a food
plot, but this herd was doing it on a regular basis.
My dad was sitting on his
stand on opening morning of Arkansas’ firearms season, overlooking the
larger plot of Extreme. A doe came into the plot and started feeding at
approximately 7:15. Not much surprise there with the number of deer tracks
in the plot, but the surprise was the buck that followed her our, not to
chase, but to munch on the nice-tasting plants that were growing there.
The best buck my dad has ever seen, while on stand, was taken that morning
at 7:30. The 140-class 12-pointer is a basic 8-point with several
stickers, giving it character that will add to the conversation as the
deer hangs on my dad’s living room wall.
Our confidence in these
new Extreme food plots is growing at about the same rate as the plants
themselves, and with a little TLC, we should be looking for more good
things to come out of them. The best part about them, at this point, is
not having to go through another planting for the next few years. When we
put the numbers to it, we discovered that the initial investment in the
Extreme will be balanced out over the next few years as compared to
replanting oats and clover every year, while having a much more
nutritional mix of plants. We believe we made the right choice by going
with this blend from the Whitetail Institute, and many thanks to them for
their research and development in a seed blend that met our needs.