It's getting a little late for this, but what implement would you all recommend to lay down a food plot in my back field? Most of the seed I see is no till but I still would imagine you'd want to rough up the ground a little.
I have been subscribing to this method for a few years. It has definitely save a lot of time and expense. Last year, instead of mowing, I sprayed, lightly ran over the plot one time with the disk, broadcasted seed and fertilizer and then lightly disked again. All the dead vegetation laid over as if I had cut it. It has worked both ways for us.I have had pretty good success spraying the plot with glyphosate to kill everything, then going back in a week or two and broadcasting my seed, lime, and fertilizer. Once I am done with that, I will take my rotary cutter and mow everything down on top of what I just broadcast. This acts like a mini greenhouse conserving moisture, keeping birds from eating your seeds and keeping the sun from baking the ground hard. Doing it this way also keeps those pesky weed seeds, sleeping in the ground, from sprouting when you turn up the soil with a 3pt disc or "bog". A good rain will lay the mat of dead vegetation down and let your plot come up through it. It will add to the organic matter of your soil and give the little micro-organisms something to slowly eat and put nutrients back in your soil. If you want to take it a little further, you can cultipack or roll over it to get more seed to soil contact and get the mat closer to the seeds and ground.
So you don't even rough up the surface? that's good to know. I'll have to try itI have had pretty good success spraying the plot with glyphosate to kill everything, then going back in a week or two and broadcasting my seed, lime, and fertilizer. Once I am done with that, I will take my rotary cutter and mow everything down on top of what I just broadcast. This acts like a mini greenhouse conserving moisture, keeping birds from eating your seeds and keeping the sun from baking the ground hard. Doing it this way also keeps those pesky weed seeds, sleeping in the ground, from sprouting when you turn up the soil with a 3pt disc or "bog". A good rain will lay the mat of dead vegetation down and let your plot come up through it. It will add to the organic matter of your soil and give the little micro-organisms something to slowly eat and put nutrients back in your soil. If you want to take it a little further, you can cultipack or roll over it to get more seed to soil contact and get the mat closer to the seeds and ground.
I do not. I just make sure that I broadcast my seed BEFORE I cut. This lets the seed get down to the ground better. Everything that gets cut, adds to the OM(organic matter) and fertility of the soil. I have done this for a couple of years on one property and have added no lime or fertilizer. We just started on our lease. I pulled the soil test the other day and my pH is 6.46. This has been native vegetation for roughly 10 years before I started messing with it. I disced it twice. Once was the first time I planted it and the second time is when I expanded it to double the plot size. This will be my 5th fall planting it and I have already sprayed. Work and other commitments have delayed my planting it, but I am hoping to fertilize and plant this coming Sunday. I am not against discing, but I try to do it the least amount that I can.So you don't even rough up the surface? that's good to know. I'll have to try it