Originally posted by arrowlauncherdj: Food plot time, lol... or like said earlier, hunt over water if you can find it.dave
Originally posted by AWPForester: Drought conditions are causing the leaves to turn earlier, and the reason the corn has no ears on it. Every year you are going to have some early droppers on the mast due to the acorns that are just bad. Unless a freak wind/storm knocks them out, the ones on the ground now are not solid, or the meat is bad, going bad, or has/had worms in it.At least here the mast is pretty good this year but it is spotty. There are scarlet and black oak in pockets and it seems the chestnut oak hit. Some white oak as well. You guys that are having the bad drought probably are not going to have much mast next year on the red oak family unless they start getting some moisture real soon. By the sound of it it might be too late though.Your Red Oak family takes 2 years for the acorns to reach maturity. white oak only takes one. So when you have years of high levels of stress on the first year of the acorns on the red oaks, next year normally suffers. However, the Scarlet(pin)oak is drought resistant and will usually have them when the true Red and Black oaks do not.By all means check the Red oak families this year as they could have very well still produced their acorns due to the 2 year maturity they require. Find your oaks in the hollows and wet east and north faces and see if they produced. This is the kind of year when you find the food, better watch our vause the deer are going to be hammering it. Good luck and God Bless