Growing The Best Clover Food Plot
Tips, Tricks
Finally part 3 of our small food plot series is here. I know a lot of you food plotters have been waiting for this video as your clover is most likely sprouting and already getting some attention from deer and turkeys. As spring and summer progresses your small clover food plots will begin to get weedier and weedier and it will be time to control these weeds. This video will cover how to control weeds in clover plots and more importantly grow the best small food plots before fall arrives. If you are just joining the series watch Part 1 and Part 2 of the series to catch up. Part 1: How To Plant Successful Small Food Plots for Deer Part 2: What To Plant for Small Food Plot Success Controlling weeds in clover plots Now the most common method to controlling weeds in small clover food plots is mowing. I highly advise against this option. To find out more on the subject watch this video on mowing clover food plots. To really maintain and grow the best small clover food plots, 2 simple herbicides can be used. If you are looking for which herbicides to use on clover or other legumes these are your two go to food plots. One herbicide is a grass selective herbicide (Clethodim 2EC mixed with a crop oil) and the other is a broadleaf selective herbicide (Butyrac 200). Together these two herbicides can wipe out every weed commonly experienced in your clover plot but not harm legumes such as clover. Once applied everything in the plot except the clover will die. Be careful these herbicides will kill chicory, wheat, oats or some other species that you might mix into your plots. Other than these two herbicides you might also be interested in the PlotBoost from DeerGro I mixed into the tank along with the herbicides. PlotBoost fights off any herbicide yield drag. We see this mostly on roundup ready crops like soybeans or corn, the “yellow flash” that can set in after application of glyphosate. This will boost this clover plot and increase the health of the clover, and help extract the nutrients made available from the PlotStart application and resulting ph. Stay up to date on our Facebook page and look out for more installments and ideas to make your small food plots, clover food plots, and small properties better for deer hunting.
Comments
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Its sad that most people making food plots to feed wild animals that they hope to eat one day use all these chemicals. The reason i hunt is to get healthy chemical free (as much as possible) meat. I dont understand why people think poisoning nature is a safe and logical way to feed wildlife. You would do more good if you did small controlled burns every few years to create different stages of forest maturity. For weed control dont have a monoculture food plot, no where in nature is there a monoculture. If you added multiple species of plants(3-11 different species) that deer eat, like warm and cool season grasses, broad leaf and legumes you wouldnt need herbicides because every thing you planted would choke out the weeds. Also if you do companion planting and cover crops you wouldnt need fertilizer, pesticides or herbicides. Do research on cover crops and companion planting, it may seem complicated at first but it will save you lots of money that your giving to chemical companies and it will make your environment and game animals healthier. Mother nature amd our grand kids grand kids future depends on the choices and actions we make today
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What application rate do you use, per gallon of water, with clethodim?
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A shame that all those herbicides you used can not kill the seeds in the soil also. I hope you didn't get it on your skin, eyes or in your lungs. Don't you measure anything? All I saw was you pouring it straight in the sprayer? The plot booster sounded like a good ideal. Thanks for the video.
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