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Hunting & Fishing
What are you planting for food plots
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 1252057" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>The deal with milo.</p><p>It takes a lot of acreage to put in a milo food plot and a bean field rifle.</p><p>The deer won't touch the heads until they are ripe, and then gorge on the field. I put in a 17 acre milo patch to harvest one year, and by the time it was ready to harvest, it was nothing but stripped heads.</p><p>The deer put their mouth over it(watched this many times) and pull the seeds off of the head. The benefit of this is that the ground birds like pheasant and quail will eat the grain that slips out of their mouth and falls to the ground. One specie can benefit from another.</p><p>One has to plant milo around june to be ready for hunting season. Its not a good food plot crop for the above reasons.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 1252057, member: 5412"] The deal with milo. It takes a lot of acreage to put in a milo food plot and a bean field rifle. The deer won't touch the heads until they are ripe, and then gorge on the field. I put in a 17 acre milo patch to harvest one year, and by the time it was ready to harvest, it was nothing but stripped heads. The deer put their mouth over it(watched this many times) and pull the seeds off of the head. The benefit of this is that the ground birds like pheasant and quail will eat the grain that slips out of their mouth and falls to the ground. One specie can benefit from another. One has to plant milo around june to be ready for hunting season. Its not a good food plot crop for the above reasons. [/QUOTE]
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