We're in the process of doing some plot work/expansion/design.
I remember years ago some ideas I read about in DEER AND DEER HUNTING or BOWHUNTER magazine perhaps, but have moved several times and the article was lost in the shuffles from place to place. Seems the idea was small, hourglass shaped plots where the 'pinch point' in the middle was 20 yards or less across and you put your stands in those locations...but that's all I remember.
Does anyone have a resource I could go to, or some thoughts they'd like to share on designing food plots for bowhunters to hunt over AND to assist wildlife in the other portions of the year.
We have some things working against us- sandy soil which will obviously limit the things we can grow- example- clovers don't do well here without an enormous amount of fertilization so they're out for us due to expenses.
We have planted pines, oak bottoms and flats, a big swamp along a river, palmetto flats, and have all the equipment one would ever need to create just about anything you could come up with.
What we need is design and prep requirements to turn them into plantable plots/planting strategies once they're developed into plots/ and ideas on what would be the best crops for our area- which is the low country of SC within the Savannah River basin. It's a mixture as I said of flat as a pancake 'hill' land nearest the paved road that is covered in varied age classes of loblolly and long leaf pine plantations - from 6 feet tall to 100 feet-with a good road system..
That's really where we think we need these plots but we do have a very large, never logged old growth river bottom swamp of white and red oak, cypress, hickory, tulip poplar-with 125 foot canopy that is filled with grape vines running up the trees. There are some open places there we could do limited small plots in.
Additionally, we also have a second growth water oak flat with a floor covering of palmettos and we're open to doing things in there as well.
If we're going to do this- we want to do it as well as we possibly can within our budget and with the tools we have at our disposal- which are considerable.