No Profanity *** No Flaming *** No Advertising *** No Anti Trappers ***NO POLITICS
No Non-Target Catches *** No Links to Anti-trapping Sites *** No Avoiding Profanity Filter


Home~Trap Talk~ADC Forum~Trap Shed~Wilderness Trapping~International Trappers~Fur Handling

Auction Forum~Trapper Tips~Links~Gallery~Basic Sets~Convention Calendar~Chat~ Trap Collecting Forum

Trapper's Humor~Strictly Trapping~Fur Buyers Directory~Mugshots~Fur Sale Directory~Wildcrafting~The Pen and Quill

Trapper's Tales~Words From The Past~Legends~Archives~Kids Forum~Lure Formulators Forum~ Fermenter's Forum


~~~ Dobbins' Products Catalog ~~~


Minnesota Trapline Products
Please support our sponsor for the Trappers Talk Page - Minnesota Trapline Products


Print Thread
Hop To
Page 1 of 2 1 2
Shaded area food plot? #8099069
03/13/24 07:45 PM
03/13/24 07:45 PM
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
B
BigJoe. Offline OP
trapper
BigJoe.  Offline OP
trapper
B

Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
What food plot seed have any of you had luck with in shaded areas? I tried some from TSC last season that stated it was for shaded areas. It came up but at about 4-6 inches high it stopped. By early summer it was dried up. I can't remember the brand or seed type.


Michigan Trappers and Predator Callers Association Director at Large
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099074
03/13/24 08:02 PM
03/13/24 08:02 PM
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 3,194
Green Bay, Wisconsin
tlguy Online content
trapper
tlguy  Online Content
trapper

Joined: May 2013
Posts: 3,194
Green Bay, Wisconsin
How shady? Any food plot is going to need some sun. This chart from Domain Outdoor will give you an idea what they recommend based on different conditions. They're a Wisconsin company, so they sell stuff for our neck of the woods.

https://domainoutdoor.com/pages/food-plot-selector

Last edited by tlguy; 03/13/24 08:03 PM.
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099075
03/13/24 08:02 PM
03/13/24 08:02 PM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,701
S.E. Ohio
M
M.Magis Offline
trapper
M.Magis  Offline
trapper
M

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,701
S.E. Ohio
Nothing of any interest to deer will thrive in shade. The results you got were probably as good as you can hope for without cutting trees.

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099085
03/13/24 08:32 PM
03/13/24 08:32 PM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,004
Eastern Shore, MD
J
JoMiBru Offline
trapper
JoMiBru  Offline
trapper
J

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,004
Eastern Shore, MD
A white clover is probably your best bet.

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099088
03/13/24 08:36 PM
03/13/24 08:36 PM
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
B
BigJoe. Offline OP
trapper
BigJoe.  Offline OP
trapper
B

Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
Thanks for the tips


Michigan Trappers and Predator Callers Association Director at Large
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099090
03/13/24 08:38 PM
03/13/24 08:38 PM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,004
Eastern Shore, MD
J
JoMiBru Offline
trapper
JoMiBru  Offline
trapper
J

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,004
Eastern Shore, MD
Durana Clover might be a good option. Ladino, alsike, dutch also.

From my own experience, white clovers can thrive in shade. Don’t expect tall growth or much tonnage, but it will attract deer once established

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099141
03/13/24 09:56 PM
03/13/24 09:56 PM
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 7,462
western mn
B
bucksnbears Offline
trapper
bucksnbears  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 7,462
western mn
White clovers. Still needs some sun.
Oats and rye can do ok with partial sun.


swampgas chili and schmidt beer makes for a deadly combo

You have to remember that 1 out of 3 Democratic Voters is just as dumb as the other two.
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: bucksnbears] #8099153
03/13/24 10:07 PM
03/13/24 10:07 PM
Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 10,123
WI - Wisconsin
A
AJE Offline
trapper
AJE  Offline
trapper
A

Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 10,123
WI - Wisconsin
Originally Posted by bucksnbears

Oats and rye can do ok with partial sun.
A nice feature of oats and rye is that they will pretty much grow in the back of a truck

Last edited by AJE; 03/13/24 10:07 PM.
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: M.Magis] #8099205
03/14/24 12:51 AM
03/14/24 12:51 AM
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 1,947
east central WI
D
Dirty D Offline
trapper
Dirty D  Offline
trapper
D

Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 1,947
east central WI
Originally Posted by M.Magis
Nothing of any interest to deer will thrive in shade.


This is far from the truth. Stop thinking about cultivated crops and start looking and watching what a deer eat. Take a walk thru a woods at various times of the year and look at what they browse on.

Almost all the deer over browsing I see is in wooded (shaded) areas, not open areas.

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099249
03/14/24 05:39 AM
03/14/24 05:39 AM
Joined: Jul 2022
Posts: 1,038
Va
S
Spike369 Offline
trapper
Spike369  Offline
trapper
S

Joined: Jul 2022
Posts: 1,038
Va
Clover

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099253
03/14/24 05:53 AM
03/14/24 05:53 AM
Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 14,189
Michigan
T
Trapper Dahlgren Offline
trapper
Trapper Dahlgren  Offline
trapper
T

Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 14,189
Michigan
used to plant, what I believe was called treefoil? grew good in shade and deer like it

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: Dirty D] #8099260
03/14/24 06:18 AM
03/14/24 06:18 AM
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 1,327
vermont
V
vermontster Offline
trapper
vermontster  Offline
trapper
V

Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 1,327
vermont
Originally Posted by Dirty D
Originally Posted by M.Magis
Nothing of any interest to deer will thrive in shade.


This is far from the truth. Stop thinking about cultivated crops and start looking and watching what a deer eat. Take a walk thru a woods at various times of the year and look at what they browse on.

Almost all the deer over browsing I see is in wooded (shaded) areas, not open areas.

X2, plus what they like to eat at different times of the year like jewel weed, raspberry and blackberry leaves and more


The bitterness of poor quality last a lot longer than the sweetness of low price
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: Dirty D] #8099270
03/14/24 06:47 AM
03/14/24 06:47 AM
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,701
S.E. Ohio
M
M.Magis Offline
trapper
M.Magis  Offline
trapper
M

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,701
S.E. Ohio
Originally Posted by Dirty D
Originally Posted by M.Magis
Nothing of any interest to deer will thrive in shade.


This is far from the truth. Stop thinking about cultivated crops and start looking and watching what a deer eat. Take a walk thru a woods at various times of the year and look at what they browse on.

Almost all the deer over browsing I see is in wooded (shaded) areas, not open areas.




That has absolutely nothing to do with the question. He asked about food plots, not browse. They’re two entirely different things.

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099283
03/14/24 07:05 AM
03/14/24 07:05 AM
Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 3,897
Wisconsin
E
Eagleye Offline
trapper
Eagleye  Offline
trapper
E

Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 3,897
Wisconsin
I plant my kill plot edges in timber with the following:

Spring Triticale
Balansa Fixation clover
Forage Brassica
Ladino Clover
Medium Red Clover
Alsike Clover
Frosty Berseem Clover

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099290
03/14/24 07:32 AM
03/14/24 07:32 AM
Joined: May 2023
Posts: 107
Virginia
G
GUNNLEG Offline
trapper
GUNNLEG  Offline
trapper
G

Joined: May 2023
Posts: 107
Virginia
I can't offer you much for what you may be dealing with in MI based on the differences in general climate and growing season, but in VA I'll x10 the WHITE clover recomendations for shade.

As M.Magis pointed out, this has nothing to do with your food plot question, but if you aren't getting results based on how shaded this area may be, perhaps look into a shrub that offers browse and is shade tolerant.

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099313
03/14/24 08:22 AM
03/14/24 08:22 AM
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
B
BigJoe. Offline OP
trapper
BigJoe.  Offline OP
trapper
B

Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
I probably should have explained why I'm looking for a shade tolerant food plot. We own about 40 acres mostly wooded. There is one open area that is about 60 feet wide by about 150 yards long. This is our primary food plot. But it is more towards the east side of our property. In the center of our property is two different bedding/thicket areas and also an old logging road. It is on part of this logging road where we try to grow some food plots.
On 3 sides of our property it is open crop land owned by a very large potato farm. The crops are rotated each year, last year was corn (good for deer hunting, really good) this year will be potatoes. (Not so good to attract deer).
This is why we want to draw deer in to our Woodlore with the potato crops not drawing deer in.


Michigan Trappers and Predator Callers Association Director at Large
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099326
03/14/24 08:59 AM
03/14/24 08:59 AM
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 7,462
western mn
B
bucksnbears Offline
trapper
bucksnbears  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 7,462
western mn
30 feet wide with a big canopy ??

Possible to get rid of some talltrees on the edges?


swampgas chili and schmidt beer makes for a deadly combo

You have to remember that 1 out of 3 Democratic Voters is just as dumb as the other two.
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8099332
03/14/24 09:04 AM
03/14/24 09:04 AM
Joined: Jul 2016
Posts: 2,791
Wisconsin
B
Bear Tracker Offline
trapper
Bear Tracker  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Jul 2016
Posts: 2,791
Wisconsin
North Central WI we plant 38 to 42 acres of plots, interior shaded areas are clover. I like Grandpa Rays and or Antler King products.

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8113982
04/03/24 10:24 PM
04/03/24 10:24 PM
Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 10,123
WI - Wisconsin
A
AJE Offline
trapper
AJE  Offline
trapper
A

Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 10,123
WI - Wisconsin
Originally Posted by BigJoe.
I probably should have explained why I'm looking for a shade tolerant food plot. We own about 40 acres mostly wooded. There is one open area that is about 60 feet wide by about 150 yards long. This is our primary food plot. But it is more towards the east side of our property. In the center of our property is two different bedding/thicket areas and also an old logging road. It is on part of this logging road where we try to grow some food plots.
On 3 sides of our property it is open crop land owned by a very large potato farm. The crops are rotated each year, last year was corn (good for deer hunting, really good) this year will be potatoes. (Not so good to attract deer).
This is why we want to draw deer in to our Woodlore with the potato crops not drawing deer in.

Let us know how it works for you. Good luck.

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8114087
04/04/24 05:41 AM
04/04/24 05:41 AM
Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 14,189
Michigan
T
Trapper Dahlgren Offline
trapper
Trapper Dahlgren  Offline
trapper
T

Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 14,189
Michigan
here they feed potatoes to the deer by the truck loads

Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8114123
04/04/24 07:22 AM
04/04/24 07:22 AM
Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 2,786
Northern lower Michigan
Feedinggrounds Offline
trapper
Feedinggrounds  Offline
trapper

Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 2,786
Northern lower Michigan
Northern Michigan scrub oak and jackpine blow sand here.
We buy $14 per 100# bags of field rye, very cheap. 19-19-19 fert.
put 1/4 down with 1/4 fert, a month later another 1/4 of seed with little more fert....Doing this over the course of summer. Sometimes mixed with a few #s of cheap mixed birdseed.
Makes a fair plot in the shade and sand of northern Michigan.


you're only allowed so many sunrises... I aim to see every one of them!
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8114130
04/04/24 07:28 AM
04/04/24 07:28 AM
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
B
BigJoe. Offline OP
trapper
BigJoe.  Offline OP
trapper
B

Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 721
Stanton Mi.
Thanks everyone. I will give some of this a try. I'll keep you posted.


Michigan Trappers and Predator Callers Association Director at Large
Re: Shaded area food plot? [Re: BigJoe.] #8114393
04/04/24 03:01 PM
04/04/24 03:01 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 11,394
East-Central Wisconsin
B
bblwi Offline
trapper
bblwi  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 11,394
East-Central Wisconsin
A lot of the kale crops have shade tolerance, along with beets, carrots and radishes etc. I would think some of the food plot crops related to those would work in a mix as well.

Bryce

Page 1 of 2 1 2
Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread