Showing posts with label Volume 32.1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Volume 32.1. Show all posts

The Antler Growing Cycle: More Than You Might Expect

By Matt Harper


In sales, you constantly drive toward the last day of the fiscal or calendar year, when you know if you met or fell short of your goal. If you succeed, you’ll feel fulfilled as you look back at the effort and hard work it took to reach that point.

IMPACT: A TRUE LIME ALTERNATIVE

 

By Jon Cooner

Soil pH is the most important factor you can control to ensure food plot success. Whitetail Institute Impact is a new tool for food plotters that increases soil pH without lime. It’s ideal for remote plot locations where liming isn’t an option, and to provide an immediate short-term boost to soil pH for optimum food plot growth.

FALL ARMYWORMS: ATTACK OF THE CREEPY CRAWLERS

 

 In 2021, many food plotters learned the hard way about this common pest. That prompted an obvious question: How can you combat this foliage-eating bug?

by W. Carroll Johnson III, Ph.D. Agronomist and Weed Scientist

CURTIS CONE- NORTH CAROLINA

CURTIS CONE - NORTH CAROLINA

In 2008, we started using Whitetail Institute No Plow and had great success with it. Through time, my dad and I acquired more equipment.

PLOT PERFECTION

 

 At last there’s a full-function app designed for food plotters. Whitetail Institute’s new PlotPerfection app lets you keep all your historical and planning information in one place at your fingertips. PlotPerfection works with iPhone or Android.

Vitamins: The Forgotten Component

 

By Matt Harper

When watching football, where does your attention focus when the ball is snapped? I’d guess 99 percent of us focus on the quarterback and then the running back or receiver, depending on the ball. The ball is the focal point because its progress marks the success of a play.

Glyphosate Shortages – Supply Chain Disruption Hits Food Plots

By W. Carroll Johnson, III, PhD
Agronomist and Weed Scientist
Whitetail Institute

   This is now personal.  First, it was toilet paper and hand sanitizer.  Later, components in automobile electronics became scarce.  Supply chain disruption has now hit agriculture and by extension, food plots.  Glyphosate is in short supply and prices have escalated.  I have given up on trying to comprehend the causes of supply chain disruption and I am not even going to touch that aspect of the glyphosate shortage.  I am going straight to weed management alternatives without glyphosate.