If your corn was stored in a cool dry area it should be fine. You can always do a germ test on it to make sure. Have to Google how to do it but basically put a handful between wet paper towels and see how many sprout.I have a couple acres of corn seed left over from last year, would this be good seed still?
I am always curious what the herbicide/fertilizer program looks like for guys that **sucessfully** do this. Nobody ever dives into thatListened to Tony Lapratt on the latest Exodus podcast. He was praising beans and corn planted together at 70/30 with a grain drill. Curious if anyone has tried this and seen success? He said deer won’t detassel the corn due to it not being planted in rows, rather random.
I am always curious what the herbicide/fertilizer program looks like for guys that **sucessfully** do this. Nobody ever dives into that
It also seems like if you had just regular, clean beans right next to it, the deer would prefer that 10:1. Even if there are sparse foxtail or other weed stalks in a beanfield corner or whatever, the deer will ALWAYS eat everything else in the field before that. At least from my experience anyway.
I wish we had more time to dive into this topic with Tony! It’s a very intriguing idea.Listened to Tony Lapratt on the latest Exodus podcast. He was praising beans and corn planted together at 70/30 with a grain drill. Curious if anyone has tried this and seen success? He said deer won’t detassel the corn due to it not being planted in rows, rather random.
Jake, so glad you roped him in. I know a couple guys who know a little bit of everyone in the game and have had them to their farms, out of all the guys out there the two who don’t know each other both say Tony’s approach works the best on their farms. Specifically breaking up sight lines forcing for more movement. Really glad you spoke with him, give us a round two sometime down the road!I wish we had more time to dive into this topic with Tony! It’s a very intriguing idea.
Some questions that came to mind after he said 70% beans, 30% corn...What rates? What fertilizer? What herbicide?
Thanks Jake, I think a reduced overall yield is acceptable as long as the deer leave them alone during the summer months. Part of what Tony said that had me curious was he made it sound like the grain conference he went to in Louisville almost made it seem like he was getting higher yields, and that it would be the way of the future once they figure out how to harvest it?We're planning to record some more with him later this month. I'm hoping we'll be able to dive into this more and get the information out before spring planting ramps up.
I did try doing some research since talking with Tony and found this article: https://deerassociation.com/mixing-corn-soybeans-food-plots/#:~:text=Corn and soybeans represent the,pounds of corn per acre.
It sure sounded to me that he was planting them together so the deer didn't have browse lines.I'm not so sure he is really intercropping here. Maybe just referring to area sizes.. ??
Sorry for maybe a dumb question (I am just getting into alot of this land/habitat management stuff) but When you say you just disc in the soybeans and milo, does that mean that you are broadcasting the seed with a backpack spreader or something similiar and then coming back over the top with the tractor and disc and whatever grows grows and whatever doesnt, doesnt? Also, are you starting with a predisc field? or just broadcasting over the top and going closer to more of a "no-till" concept?Maybe Dual? I know guys use that for soybean / milo intercropping.
I just disc in soybeans and milo together with about 200# AMS. Always have a great stand of milo. Soybeans here and there depending on how the deer pressure is over the summer. Great thing is they leave the milo alone so its a great "full season" strategy with both summer and fall food. Butted up to a brassica planting it works quite well for me.
No herbicide, I just let it go. The occasional foxtail patch just adds to the cover mess.
Richardson RS230 Hybrid Grain Sorghum (sorry for the crummy pic).
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I start with a disc'd field that I have spray with roundup a time or two. Then broadcast, the a light disc. If I have the time I may drag it with a harrow to smooth it out a little.Sorry for maybe a dumb question (I am just getting into alot of this land/habitat management stuff) but When you say you just disc in the soybeans and milo, does that mean that you are broadcasting the seed with a backpack spreader or something similiar and then coming back over the top with the tractor and disc and whatever grows grows and whatever doesnt, doesnt? Also, are you starting with a predisc field? or just broadcasting over the top and going closer to more of a "no-till" concept?
Sorry for maybe a dumb question (I am just getting into alot of this land/habitat management stuff) but When you say you just disc in the soybeans and milo, does that mean that you are broadcasting the seed with a backpack spreader or something similiar and then coming back over the top with the tractor and disc and whatever grows grows and whatever doesnt, doesnt? Also, are you starting with a predisc field? or just broadcasting over the top and going closer to more of a "no-till" concept?
Awesome thank you, I dont have much equipment so this is about the only way I will be able to get something done. Ive got a 4wheeler with some black boar attachments (disc, cultipacker) and a sprayer. So trying to figure out how I can maximize efficiency with little equipment.I'm old school farming them in.
Spread fertilizer (AMS/Urea) first, then 1st pass disc (primary tillage), spread milo/bean seed, 2nd pass disc (lightly incorporate), 3rd pass cultipacker.