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7 registered members (cmontgomery, Larryj, BCLC, Mulcher, canine933, Longtine, 1 invisible),
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1336183
04/24/15 03:09 AM
04/24/15 03:09 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285
Awbarn, AL
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Here are just a couple examples of why I don’t think that we as wildlife managers should take the same approach to “weeds” as what a farmer might. Do the deer call this a weed? There were several of these scattered around this area and they were all heavily browsed……. and its not just that they are browsed but look at the browse resistance properties that the plants have. Why eliminate this browse resistant broadleaf plant that the deer obviously like, only to replace it with another broadleaf plant like sunflowers that will likely not tolerate the same browsing pressure. Why not just grow them all together?  Same thing…..all heavily browsed…… Anyone who disagrees feel free to comment but please keep it constructive…….. 
Last edited by CNC; 04/24/15 03:12 AM.
“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1336260
04/24/15 04:28 AM
04/24/15 04:28 AM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 6,850 Lake View, AL
Joe4majors
14 point
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14 point
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 6,850
Lake View, AL
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Here are just a couple examples of why I don’t think that we as wildlife managers should take the same approach to “weeds” as what a farmer might. Do the deer call this a weed? There were several of these scattered around this area and they were all heavily browsed……. and its not just that they are browsed but look at the browse resistance properties that the plants have. Why eliminate this browse resistant broadleaf plant that the deer obviously like, only to replace it with another broadleaf plant like sunflowers that will likely not tolerate the same browsing pressure. Why not just grow them all together? I agree. I've cut half of the 1-acre plot I plan to plant this year. Simply by doing that I have different "weeds" (honeysuckles) coming up as opposed to the other half of the field that hasn't been tended to in years.
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1337176
04/25/15 09:17 AM
04/25/15 09:17 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285
Awbarn, AL
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Last edited by CNC; 04/25/15 09:18 AM.
“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1337565
04/25/15 07:05 PM
04/25/15 07:05 PM
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Joined: Jan 2011
Posts: 38,489 N. Bama
257wbymag
Boo Boo Head
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Boo Boo Head
Joined: Jan 2011
Posts: 38,489
N. Bama
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Maybe cause marestail is one of the worst weeds known to farmers ding dong. You think it's a good thing??? Just goes to show how out of touch you are with reality.
Quietly killing turkeys where youre not!!! My tank full of give a fraks been runnin on empty I'm the paterfamilias
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1337692
04/26/15 04:16 AM
04/26/15 04:16 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285
Awbarn, AL
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Another area where plants such as these help us out, other than adding diversity to the salad mix……is in our effort to produce biomass above ground and in the root zone for the purpose of building soil organic matter. If you’ve been tilling for years and have your soil down to zero organic matter….then these plants will be some of the best options you have in the beginning. Why? Because they will tolerate poor conditions, deer browsing, and still produce biomass for the soil. There is a reason why these type plants start dominating in agricultural fields…..Its because we as humans have created the situation that gives them an extreme advantage over more finicky food crops. Growing in a very diverse “prairie” type mix, with good soil health, that is left undisturbed from tillage....these plants will simply fill their niche and not take over. What would happen if you terminated all of these plants and planted a crop of say only cowpeas and sunflowers in the same field???……They likely would be decimated and produce little biomass to feed back to the soil. Therefore, you would actually be regressing from a soil health standpoint as decomposition of OM never stops whether you produce more biomass or not. One more aspect that leaving the diversity provides you from a soil health standpoint is underground in the root system. We are not only producing biomass above ground but we are also producing it below ground as well through the root systems of the plants. An example is the extensive root system of cereal rye. Let me see if I can explain this without hunting down a picture…… So lets imagine we are looking at a soil profile picture from the surface down to 3-4 ft. One of our goals from a soil health perspective is to fill up that profile with plants roots as deep as we can get them. Adding diversity to the field adds many different shaped root systems, which fills that soil profile at many different levels. When the plants die, these root systems rot and become organic matter.
Last edited by CNC; 04/26/15 04:23 AM.
“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: 257wbymag]
#1337921
04/26/15 12:27 PM
04/26/15 12:27 PM
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Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,021 Auburn
frezznh2o
6 point
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6 point
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,021
Auburn
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Maybe cause marestail is one of the worst weeds known to farmers ding dong. You think it's a good thing??? Just goes to show how out of touch you are with reality. I'm sure your very knowledgeable on the subject, but your childish name calling makes it impossible to take you seriously.
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: frezznh2o]
#1338164
04/27/15 12:48 AM
04/27/15 12:48 AM
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Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 627 Hueytown, Al.
smokinya
4 point
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4 point
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 627
Hueytown, Al.
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Maybe cause marestail is one of the worst weeds known to farmers ding dong. You think it's a good thing??? Just goes to show how out of touch you are with reality. I'm sure your very knowledgeable on the subject, but your childish name calling makes it impossible to take you seriously. Im with you on these childish posts...........who cares if its bad for a farmer. We are talking about planting and growing food for deer!
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: smokinya]
#1338291
04/27/15 04:43 AM
04/27/15 04:43 AM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 6,850 Lake View, AL
Joe4majors
14 point
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14 point
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 6,850
Lake View, AL
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Maybe cause marestail is one of the worst weeds known to farmers ding dong. You think it's a good thing??? Just goes to show how out of touch you are with reality. I'm sure your very knowledgeable on the subject, but your childish name calling makes it impossible to take you seriously. Im with you on these childish posts...........who cares if its bad for a farmer. We are talking about planting and growing food for deer! Yep
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: smokinya]
#1338299
04/27/15 04:52 AM
04/27/15 04:52 AM
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Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,021 Auburn
frezznh2o
6 point
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6 point
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,021
Auburn
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Maybe cause marestail is one of the worst weeds known to farmers ding dong. You think it's a good thing??? Just goes to show how out of touch you are with reality. I'm sure your very knowledgeable on the subject, but your childish name calling makes it impossible to take you seriously. Im with you on these childish posts...........who cares if its bad for a farmer. We are talking about planting and growing food for deer! They just can't grasp that concept. Heck the buck my daughter shot walked right past a tecomate plot and was eating something growing in the fire break.
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1338580
04/27/15 10:52 AM
04/27/15 10:52 AM
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 14,972 Clanton
Turkey_neck
Booner
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Booner
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 14,972
Clanton
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[img:center]http://  [/img] This is about waste high with mainly trictacale and several varieties of clover I'm considering trying to plant this in a week or two. The main will be I/c peas and sorghum will see how it does the soil has plenty of moisture right now.
Would walk over a naked woman to get to a gobblin turkey!
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1338730
04/27/15 02:17 PM
04/27/15 02:17 PM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285
Awbarn, AL
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Glad to see you guys posting up your throw and mow experiments. Looking forward to seeing how you guys progress. I just threw a little milo off into my field today ahead of this rain coming in. My cereal rye is thin enough now that I may not even mow it again. Probably going to throw in some buckwheat around the end of May still.
bambam.....If we could rewind the clock about 6 weeks, it would have done your plot a lot of good to have hit it with some nitrogen about the time of spring green up. You would have produced more biomass from your wheat. Wheat is a lot more finicky to poor soil conditions and nutrient defiencies (like lack of N)....as opposed to something like cereal rye. If you can get your hands of some elbon or wrens abruzzi rye this fall I would recommend trying it. In the beginning stages is when your field is going to need the most help from synthetic fertilizers. Over time as we build fertility then you will reduce the need for them.
Last edited by CNC; 04/27/15 02:19 PM.
“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: frezznh2o]
#1338866
04/27/15 03:53 PM
04/27/15 03:53 PM
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 15,122 Tuscaloosa Co.
N2TRKYS
Old Mossy Horns
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Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 15,122
Tuscaloosa Co.
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Heck the buck my daughter shot walked right past a tecomate plot and was eating something growing in the fire break. There could be several reasons for that happening.
83% of all statistics are made up.
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: bambam32]
#1339269
04/28/15 07:00 AM
04/28/15 07:00 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285
Awbarn, AL
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Thanks for the tips. Fortunately we got a really good rain at the camp today. It'll be two weeks before I can get back up and will post some pics.
Yellow, red, and purple colors are signs of plant stress from things like rapid temp change, nutrient deficiencies, lack of oxygen, ect…..The next time you go back I would take a couple bags of 17-`17-17 and go ahead and get something out for now to give the plants a boost. The new plants will be growing in the same nutrient deficient soil that caused that poor looking wheat. While your there pull a soil sample and send it in to have tested. It’s something like $7 at Auburn. I’d also recommend taking back a bag of milo with you and throw some of it out before the next rain. It would be a good thing if you have some type of grass specie growing in there this summer. “Grass” species are our biggest suppliers of organic matter….high C/N ratio. For winter and summer try to include 3 components of your mix……grass, broadleaf, legume. They all play a role in making the whole cycle function properly.
Last edited by CNC; 04/28/15 07:01 AM.
“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: CNC]
#1339319
04/28/15 08:08 AM
04/28/15 08:08 AM
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 15,122 Tuscaloosa Co.
N2TRKYS
Old Mossy Horns
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Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 15,122
Tuscaloosa Co.
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It would be a good thing if you have some type of grass specie growing in there this summer. “Grass” species are our biggest suppliers of organic matter….high C/N ratio. For winter and summer try to include 3 components of your mix……grass, broadleaf, legume. They all play a role in making the whole cycle function properly. I've got all 3 with my fall foodplot. I think I'm gonna allow mind to grow, like I always do. I'm thinking of waiting until my fall planting.
83% of all statistics are made up.
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Re: Throw n' Mow Tutorial
[Re: N2TRKYS]
#1339458
04/28/15 11:54 AM
04/28/15 11:54 AM
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285 Awbarn, AL
CNC
OP
Dances With Weeds
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OP
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,285
Awbarn, AL
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[quote=CNC] I've got all 3 with my fall foodplot. I think I'm gonna allow mind to grow, like I always do. I'm thinking of waiting until my fall planting. I think that would probably be a good option for a lot of folks. If you have small plots and/or high deer densities, then you will likely be ahead of the game to just grow lush crops of native browse in the summer time along with some clover. There’s nothing wrong with that. Continue adding to the fertility needs and produce a good crop of biomass for the soil. Doing this will likely allow you to turn the soil around a lot quicker than trying to do it with “crop” type plants that may struggle or get wiped out by browsing.
“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
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