QDMA Articles :
Winning the Weed Wars in Your Food Plots
By: Kent Kammermeyer
Well, you thought you did everything
right. Lets see, got that soil test, applied recommended
lime and fertilizer, prepared a smooth seedbed, inoculated your
legumes, carefully broadcast your seed, covered lightly, and prayed
for rain. OK, then why are you standing here now looking at an
ugly patch of weeds choking out your deer plot? This is what they
forgot to tell you about at the seed dealers. Maybe even the county
agricultural agent or the wildlife biologist didnt tell
you.
Weed control is a very complex subject
which varies from one piece of ground to another, depending upon
the species or root systems already in the soil, the last time
it was plowed, and the weather. There are hundreds of species
of weeds, both annual and perennial, ready to take advantage of
all that money you spent on lime and fertilizer!
Why control weeds? Because they can severely compete with your
deer planting for moisture and light and thus lower the production,
quality, and utilization. A certain level of weed infestation
can be tolerated, depending on who the invader is and whether
the objective of the target planting is forage or seed production.
This time of year, you could be dealing
with both categories of food plotsa cool season planting,
planted last fall in clover, alfalfa, or trefoil which is now
being invaded by warm season grasses or a warm season planting,
planted in May or June with corn, grain sorghum, peas, jointvetch,
alyce clover, soybeans, etc. Each has its own set of problems
and remedies well discuss later.
Lets go through this step by
step procedure to simplify a complex problem and lead us to the
best approach to win the weed wars.
(1) Identify The Enemy. Is it a broadleaf
or a grass? Is it an annual or a perennial? Was it here last year?
If you cant identify the weed, take a sample to your agriculture
extension agent, university agronomy department, wildlife biologist,
or even a nearby farmer. Weed lists are long. Here is a short
list of some common offenders by category. Broadleaf weeds include
pigweed, ragweed, horsenettle, thistle, jimsonweed, morning glory,
milkweed, and coffeeweed. Grasses include fescue, bermudagrass,
johnsongrass, crabgrass, foxtail, and many others.
(2) Planning Is Important. In some
respects, if you are standing in the weeds in mid-summer wondering
what to do, its too late for some of the best tactics. What
weeds invaded this plot last year? Chances are it was the same
species. Your observation of weeds from last year should have
influenced what crop you planted this yeara broadleaf or
a grass. In other words, if you have had past weed problems from
the grass family, such as crabgrass, plant a broadleaf such as
clover, jointvetch, or peas. Vice versa, plant a grass such as
grain sorghum if your weed problem is a broadleaf. This system
allows for selective control of your weeds with chemical herbicides
without killing your target planting. See what I mean by planning?
More about selective herbicides later.
(3) Control Method (choose your weapon)Cut,
Competition or Chemicals. Many deer food plants are highly tolerant
of repeated mowing or cutting. These include clover, alfalfa,
and trefoil. You often can give your plants a good competitive
edge by mowing, which weakens or kills the weeds and stimulates
regrowth of your target plant. This wont work, however,
with peas, beans, or grain sorghum which do not respond well to
cutting.
By planning ahead, you can out-compete
your weeds using shade. For example, if your weed problem last
year was crabgrass, bermuda, or fescue, you can plow in early
spring, let sit, plow again and plant in grain sorghum or corn,
which grow tall and shade out these grasses. Broadcast rate is
important here (5 lbs/acre grain sorghum and 5 lbs/acre corn mixed
or 10 lbs/acre grain sorghum by itsel
f). Plant variety is also important. For grain sorghum, use tall
growing bird resistant varieties (not WGF) for best results.
Of all the options, however, chemicals are often the best choice
for your food plot. Chemicals are safe, when used correctly, effective,
inexpensive, and cut manpower and plowing tremendously. From this
point on, well concentrate on chemicals.
(4) Getting Started With Chemicals.
Obviously, you have to have some spraying equipment. Usually a
garden type two or three gallon sprayer wont do it if your
weed problem is fairly extensive. You will quickly find yourself
under-gunned. One possible exception is spraying individual
thistle plants or fescue clumpsin cool-season plots. Roundup or
2,4-D can be used for this.
More likely, if you are serious about
food plots, you will need a spray rig for a four-wheeler, pickup
truck, or tractor. These are available in electric or gas driven
for four-wheelers and electric or PTO driven for tractors. Boom
type sprayers with fan nozzles are usually better than rainbow
type sprayers. Sprayers range in price from $150 to $2,000, depending
on features.
If you have big fields with good access,
you may be able to hire your spraying by truck from a local farm
cooperative, seed dealer, or farmer.
(5) What Chemicals to Use. There are
hundreds of herbicides on the market. For purposes of this article,
well concentrate on threeRoundup®, Poast®,
and 2,4-D. Roundup kills a broad range of both grasses and broadleaves.
Its best use is to control unwanted vegetation prior to the use
of a grain drill. With Roundup and a no-till grain drill, you
can just about get rid of your disk harrows, or plows. This time
of year, spray Roundup and drill grain sorghum, peas, jointvetch,
or alyceclover. If no drill is available, spray, wait two weeks,
plow and plant. Although the Roundup will kill all germinated
plants it contacts, the plowing will likely germinate a new crop
of weed seeds (probably reduced in number from the previous crop).
Poast is a grass selective herbicide
that basically kills most grasses but no broadleafs. So, if we
are still standing in our food plot in June or July and the plot
is a broadleaved perennial like alfalfa, clover, or trefoil being
invaded with crabgrass, johnsongrass, bermuda, or fescue, then
Poast is our weapon. Even new annual broadleaf plantings of peas,
beans, clover, or jointvetch are candidates for Poast which must
be mixed with a crop oil concentrate for best results. This is
where last years planning pays off. If this plot had problems
with crabgrass or johnsongrass last year, plow repeatedly and
plant a broadleaf. When the noxious grass reemerges, spray with
Poast for the knockout punch. Whichever scenario, if the noxious
grasses are over six inches tall, mow, wait a week or two, and
then spray the regrowth.
2,4-D is a broadleaf killer that has
been around under many brand names for several years. It will
not kill grasses. Grain sorghum infested with coffeeweed, ragweed,
jimsonweed, morning glory, or any other broadleaf qualifies for
2,4-D application. Grain sorghum is a little sensitive to 2,4-D,
so read the label carefully. Atrazine is a great herbicide for
grain sorghum or corn, but is a controlled chemical requiring
a private pesticide applicators license. 2,4-D, Poast, and
Roundup are all available over the counter with no license required.
(6) Read The Label. This cannot be
emphasized enough. Do not apply any more chemical than the label
directs! Use at least 20 to 30 gallons of water per acre for best
coverage and effective kills. Do not mix herbicides unless it
specifically states this on the label. Carefully calibrate your
spraying equipment (your agriculture extension service can help
with this) and carefully measure your food plot acreage. I have
seen many half-acre plots that
were eyeball estimated to be one acre, thus doubling fertilizer,
seed rates, spray rates, and everything. It is a good way to waste
money and reduce efficiency. Poast always needs to be mixed with
crop oil concentrate, while Roundup and 2,4-D sometimes need to
be mixed with surfactants. Read the labels.
(7) Timing is Everything. Most weeds
are more vulnerable to chemicals when they are young and vigorously
growing. Do not spray when plants are wet or when rain is expected
within 24-48 hours. Do not spray when it is windy as drift will
render spraying ineffective and can be harmful to the applicator.
Again, when weed growth exceeds four to six inches, mow, wait
one to two weeks and spray regrowth. Do not spray during an extended
drought, weed control is ineffective and valuable crop species
may be injured or killed.
In summary, chemical herbicides are
a safe, effective tool to manage weeds in food plots. Once necessary
equipment is obtained, effective chemical applications can be
made for $15-$50 per acre. Counting equipment and manpower costs,
you cannot plow any cheaper and every time you plow, you will
germinate a new crop of weed seeds to compete with your deer plants.
The best of all worlds would be herbicides followed by no-till
drilling. Fewer weeds are germinated, soil erosion is greatly
reduced, and seed placement is precise. Drilled plots can even
be treated selectively with herbicides later as needed for final
control. By using chemicals, we have maintained vigorous ladino
clover stands for five to ten years without replanting. This is
really getting efficient and cost-effective. You, too, can win
the weed wars by careful planning and judicious use of chemicals.
The results will surprise you. Note: There are hundreds of other
herbicides that can be used effectively on deer food plots. The
three above were featured because of familiarity, name recognition,
low toxicity, easy obtainability. and widespread use. Check with
your agriculture extension agent for further information.
Kent Kammermeyer is a Senior
Wildlife Biologist with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources,
Game Management Section. Kent has over 20 years experience
working with landowners and hunters to improve the quality of
their deer herds and has published 40 scientific and 140 popular
articles, most on white-tailed deer.
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