They might camp out on it, but they can’t clean it up like a turkey. Milo, millet, and sunflowers will work as well. But corn is king.This time of year, deer will camp out on cracked corn. I've burned several sections and plowed others, but need something more to try and get them visiting
Deer and raccoons will wear milo out, as well.I have heard that milo is good, but don't put it in piles. Scatter it in the woods. It will almost disappear in the leaves but the turkey will find it and it will look like a hay rake went through the woods. Some have put in a spreader like you put out fertilize or wheat with. The kind that goes on an ATV. It might be considered illegal baiting is some states.
Imagine that!A guy once told me he used bird seed.
Assuming you are not hunting over it. As with all things, you can temporarily boost your numbers with corn. Not necessarily a great strategy though as you are just going to create an artificial ambush spot for predators to nab them. Bobcats, coyotes, etc. will key in on feeders and hurt your turkey population if not done right. Especially when poults come around.... they will get decimated at a feeder if a predator has keyed in on it.I've got wheat planted, they have plenty for spring and early summer. I need something quick now to draw them off the neighbors and hopefully get a few to nest and raise on my property.
Yep. This is it. Habitat and trap coons/yotes/bobcats.If you really want to help the turkey population I'd get some trapping done on your property. Nest predators in most areas are out of control because of corn dumping for deer and lack of coon hunters and access issues.
Been trapping for 4 years now and it's making a visible difference around here. Word is getting out and I'm getting calls from folks begging me to trap their farms.
Last year I took 27 nesters from 100 acres of hardwoods in two weeks with 10 traps. This year I had 17 traps for the same two weeks and took only 7. Most nests don't stand a chance.