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Old 07-30-2003, 09:20 PM
  #11  
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Walnut MS USA
Posts: 871
Default RE: Peanuts

Tech,
She soesn' t do all the cultivating, she just supervised me as I did it. (But there is some gardening that she doesn' t trust me to do.) I run the tractor, plow, disc, cut the winter' s firewood, and bring home the venison, if I do my scouting right.
Russ
Russ otten is offline  
Old 07-31-2003, 09:53 AM
  #12  
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Bronwood GA USA
Posts: 37
Default RE: Peanuts

I have lots of peanuts grown on my farm every year and I must say it is the best thing for wild game that we grow commercially--next to corn. Cotton has no significant benefits, but when I look out over my place and see the fields of peanuts and corn, from the perspective of a hunter, it makes me very happy (from the perspective of a farmer, cotton is more profitable, but that' s another issue!).
I lease out the row crop farming on my place each year, so don' t expect me to be an expert of the best way to cultivate all these things, but I do have a pretty good perspective on what the deer, turkeys, quail, dove, ducks prefer.
I plant food plots all over my farm. I have them in strips around cultivated fields, I have 3-5 acre plots comfortably secluded in spots surrounded by large stands of timber. I split some food plots with warm weather forages such as iron clay peas then replace the peas with clover and oats each fall. But the one constant that I have found the deer absolutely devour year-round is corn. Now they do love peanuts, but to grow them in the volume that I am able to grow corn such that there will be enough of them to support the nutrional needs of a large deer herd is not an efficient endeavor. And with corn, I can manage how fast it is consumed by mowing strips in corn patches at routine intervals of about 10 days to make sure there is always enough fresh corn on the ground to last throughout our 4 month deer season.
During the summer months before the goobers are dug and picked, the deer do enjoy eating the peanut' s leafy greens as the legumes are growing. I see deer out in my peanut fields very frequently, but you just wouldn' t believe how much the deer are pouring into my corn patches right now just wearing out their favorite golden munch.
The bottom line is that deer do like peanuts, but from my experience, they love corn even better.

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springhill farms is offline  
Old 08-02-2003, 06:48 AM
  #13  
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 4
Default RE: Peanuts

sorry to get of the discussion, but i am curious about Springhill farms. Do yall give the paid hunts or not. I live over here in albany and i was just wondering about it. If you do give paid hunts what are the costs for a day of deer hunting
bohawg is offline  
Old 08-02-2003, 09:17 PM
  #14  
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Roanoke Rapids North Carolina USA
Posts: 83
Default RE: Peanuts

We have alot peanuts here in eastern NC and the deer love em, but i think corn is better. The deer dont hit em as hard in the winter
remington_nc is offline  
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