Whitetail Institute Extreme

TN Tyrant

FNG
Joined
Jan 19, 2024
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20
Has anyone on the board had any experience with this particular food plot seed? If so, what was your experience/thoughts on the product?
 

JAC8504

Lil-Rokslider
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Nov 1, 2021
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221
I used it on my friends property. The clover has come back every year. It is about year 4 and its getting a little thin. We need to overseed. The deer still go out there and graze periodically - We never checked PH/ soil ever. Just a quick till and threw it down before a rain in august.
 
Joined
Jan 12, 2024
Messages
88
Has anyone on the board had any experience with this particular food plot seed? If so, what was your experience/thoughts on the product?
I'd try to read the label. And then go to your local feed and seed place and buy the stuff on the label, minus the ryegrass and lime coating. Those (2) items probably make up 30-40% of the volume in most bags of food plot seed you find in bags at tractor supply, rural king, walmart, etc. Ryegrass is not the same as winter rye or cereal rye. And the lime coating is not enough to amount to anything, its just adding weight and taking up volume in the bag.

Look at this example. It's 26% ryegrass and 14.50% lime coating. The bag says 9lb per 1/2 acre. What is 1.26 lbs of lime going to do on 1/2 acre? So out of 9 lbs there's actually only about 5.5 lbs of actual food plot seed.

Imperial Whitetail No Plow Mix.JPG
 
Joined
Oct 15, 2017
Messages
835
Location
MS
I'd completely stay away from it due to the ryegrass. That stuff can be a nightmare to get rid of. Much better options out there. Like the post above said, you are better off buying some grain seed (wheat, oats, grain rye) and clover individually then making your own mix.
 

Rich M

WKR
Joined
Jun 14, 2017
Messages
5,582
Location
Orlando
I bought 2 bags of Whitetail Institute "No Plow" this year as we were supposed to close on some land last week. Hurricane Helene fixed that problem, now I have 2 bags of seed that won't get planted in time for the colder weather, but maybe we'll do it anyway - money down the drain...

The mix works good in FL and GA in the fall. Don't bury the seeds too deep. Get it planted.
 

Honyock

WKR
Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Messages
987
Location
Edmond, OK
As @HoosierHunter07 said, I would check with your local feed store. I've tried various food plot seed from several companies and have found that what works the best for me is the blend that the local feed/seed store puts together based on what grows best in our area. This is what we used this year.
 

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Honyock

WKR
Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Messages
987
Location
Edmond, OK
Whatever you plant, take the time to take a soil sample and have it tested. Your county extension office will probably test it for you at a reasonable cost ($10 per sample in Oklahoma). Having the soil samples and doing what they say has helped out a lot on productive food plots. I just wish we could buy rain by the bag, we need rain.
 
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