Jamey Sickafoose - Alabama
I had No-Plow planted 40 yards from my tree stand. I had some
left over from planting it on another property and brought it to this
awful looking soil that was so sandy that nothing should grow in it. The
No-Plow came up and, of course, the deer kept it mowed down. I shot a
197-7/8 non-typical that was on the cover of Rack magazine. The
article was also in Buckmasters magazine. Nine days later on that
same I shot a 12-point buck that scored 153 Boone & Crockett points.
I’m sure the No-Plow kept the deer around.
I know for a fact that the 153 was in the field, because for three weeks
in a row a deer with a club foot was coming to the No-Plow field. The
153-inch buck had a clubbed right foot.
During a drought we didn’t have
honeysuckles or acorns, but the trails to the No-Plow were unreal. They
kept it mowed to the ground. It’s made a 100 percent difference with the
number of deer we are seeing and the size of the deer. People around us
have green fields, so we knew we had to get something that would attract
the deer. That’s when I heard about the No-Plow, and I knew it would be
a good choice for us on this property.
The biggest food plot is 1-1/2 acres and the
smallest plot is an acre.
No-Plow
is the ticket if you can’t get a tractor into the property. It was well
worth all that work that we had done.
I
never dreamed that I would take two trophy bucks like this in Alabama. I
was convinced my only hope at magazine-quality bucks would be in Ohio,
where my two brothers live and hunt, or Iowa, where some friends and I
hunted a couple of years ago.