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Joint Vetch Question aka deer vetch
Posted on 12/11/21 at 3:35 am
Posted on 12/11/21 at 3:35 am
Does anyone here plant it? My question is I know a freeze will kill it but what about near freezing temperatures?
Anyone let theirs grow instead of killing and planting a fall plot for the deer season?
I have never planted it before but will probably do so next year.
Anyone let theirs grow instead of killing and planting a fall plot for the deer season?
I have never planted it before but will probably do so next year.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 5:49 am to omegaman66
UF reports that it survives through the winter in south Florida. Heavy frosts tend to kill it, though.
When we have winters like we are having now in South Louisiana, it could go alot longer than usual simply because we haven't had any really good frosts yet.
It is an annual plant, so alot of the time, it's going to die after going to seed anyway. It's a good summer and fall food plot species, but I wouldn't count on it carrying through the winter every year unless you are very far south.
When we have winters like we are having now in South Louisiana, it could go alot longer than usual simply because we haven't had any really good frosts yet.
It is an annual plant, so alot of the time, it's going to die after going to seed anyway. It's a good summer and fall food plot species, but I wouldn't count on it carrying through the winter every year unless you are very far south.
This post was edited on 12/11/21 at 5:50 am
Posted on 12/11/21 at 6:34 am to Cowboyfan89
I had a thick plot of it that I left alone it is all dead now
Tensas parish. Had a couple light freezes
Tensas parish. Had a couple light freezes
Posted on 12/11/21 at 7:35 am to omegaman66
I think NoColors plants a lot of it every year. Maybe he'll chime in
Posted on 12/11/21 at 8:06 am to omegaman66
We've been planting it for about 12 years now. I can tell you just about everything you want to know. Ground prep. Planting methods. Seeding rates. Chemical weed control. Manual weed control. Fertilization. Life cycle.
To be honest, I've thought about doing a YouTube video about it. With pictures and video clips I've put together over the years. Because I get asked about it so often. It's a lot of information to just download.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 9:26 am to omegaman66
We received minimum benefit due to planting too late.
One knock against joint vetch is that initial germination and growth is relatively slow. This can be a problem if you have weed issues and/or plant late.
One knock against joint vetch is that initial germination and growth is relatively slow. This can be a problem if you have weed issues and/or plant late.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 9:28 am to WeagleEagle
I’m a believer. I have seen it absolutely hammered in the late summer early fall at no colors place and my place. It is very tolerant to even the shittiest soils. Our favorite way to plant is to spread by hand as the flood water recedes when the river drops in the summer. Works well then manage the weeds, clip it when high and deer hammer it.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 10:29 am to WeagleEagle
quote:
Cliff notes?
There are lots of different vetches out there. The one you want is American Joint Vetch. Aeschynomene Americana
Prepare your seed bed really well. Disk and harrow smooth. Then scatter the seed. Then roller it down with a cultipacker or something. DO NOT COVER THE SEED. It is very small seed. A rain will plant it. Remember to innoculate if you haven't grown clover or beans on this ground recently.
If you are planting a big area, (3 acres or more) you can get away with 10# to the acre. half acre to 2 acres. Use 25# to the acre. Less than half an acre (bow kill plot) use 50# to the acre.
You don't need to fertilize it. But it repsonds really well to phosphorus. #100 of triple super phosphate helps. No nitrogen. It's a legume.
The best month to plant is May, followed by June. I wouldn't plant any earlier or any later. It's a small seed. It really takes a long time to get going. It really comes into its own in late August and Sept. The more the natural vegetation gets dry and rank, the harder they will hit the vetch.
Most people have a problem with it getting too big. We don't have that problem. Our deer keep it mowed down ankle high. But if it gets over knee high you need to bushhog it.
The biggest reason we use this plant is that it cannot be killed from over grazing. Heavy grazing pressure just makes it run along the ground and cover better. It is amazing stuff. I have seen 60-80 deer in a field in August. Full sun. 90 degrees. They cannot stay away from it. It will be someting like 28% protein in August when everything else is gargbage.
The does that are stressed from nursing in August will live in it. You can't run them out. They stand there looking all bony and you can seee their ribs and their hip bones. But by the end of October they're shiny and fat. It makes them a lot of milk.
For grass control use 12 oz of Select. For weed control, use 1.5 qts of 2,4d. It will burn he vetch but it won't kill it. For sedge control, use 3/4 of one ounce of Permit with a surfactant. If you end up with weeds that they above can't control, then just mow it. Won't hurt it. Will come back even more lush and tender.
I have heard several people tell me that because it is a non native species, that it hurts a deer's stomach when they first eat it. That they don't have the gut microbes to digest it. And it gives them the runs. But after the first year they get over it and they pass the right gut bacteria onto their fawns. I don't know if this is true or not. But if they don't hit it hard the first year, give it at least one more year.
If you don;t see much growth on it or deer pressure using it at first, don't give up. The later in the year, the harder they will hit it.
A frost will kill it. We usually disk it up about the end of October and plant our winter food plots.
Plant it on the best ground or the wettest ground you have. It likes it wet. It won't work on sand or hard red clay.
Frost kills it. Unless you plant a huge area and let it get really tall where it can flower and make seed then you will have to plant it again every year. It's not cheap.
Put out an exlusion cage like in the picture above. You will be amazed.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 10:49 am to No Colors
quote:
It won't work on sand or hard red clay.
Dang it. I’m out.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 11:09 am to omegaman66
It is amazing while it is growing....better than any I have witnessed.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 11:18 am to No Colors
I'm assuming since it's a legume and produces nitrogen, whatever you plant in the fall following it usually does really well.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 11:40 am to No Colors
Is spraying the weeds that big of a deal. I can prepare the bed well but don’t really have the time or equipment to spray for weeds. Would mowing it at some point achieve decent results?
Posted on 12/11/21 at 11:51 am to No Colors
quote:
Plant it on the best ground or the wettest ground you have.
How does it do in standing water?
Say if you plant in may or June and in September it’s flooded and doesn’t recede.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 11:57 am to No Colors
quote:
I have heard several people tell me that because it is a non native species, that it hurts a deer's stomach when they first eat it. That they don't have the gut microbes to digest it. And it gives them the runs. But after the first year they get over it and they pass the right gut bacteria onto their fawns. I don't know if this is true or not. But if they don't hit it hard the first year, give it at least one more year.
It's not true. Joint vetch has a relatively low fiber content and high crude protein, making it highly digestible to deer.
Anyone sayings it's because it's "nonnative" is completely ignoring the fact that damn near every food plot species is nonnative. Native or nonnative has nothing to do with whether or not deer can eat it.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 7:24 pm to omegaman66
I planted 30 acres of it for years. Got a lil expensive and decided to have dedicated vetch plots rather than replant each spring. Basically, let it reseed and it will come back in the summer. Yes the frost will kill it. Top seed clover or another favorite grass for winter. Your clover will run out about the time vetch gets going.
Posted on 12/11/21 at 7:59 pm to No Colors
Thanks No Colors and to everyone that commented.
I am planning on planting a very small area. well under and acre.
The main reason I am wanting to do this is because of the fact that we always have a dry dry sept and October and my food plots don't really get attractive until late in the season. So I would like something to already be growing and productive for the deer during the first half of the season.
I will still have a fall plot almost next to this one. This will just be in an area that gets overgrown and I cut down a strip through it so I can see any deer that cuts across there.
So I am looking for a plot that I want to grow something year round like clover that is productive the in October and maybe more. Obviously JV isn't going to grow year round. That is fine. I plan to just let it die and stand unless the deer keep it mowed down to the dirt. If so then I will throw out some elbon rye after the jv is dead, but only if needed.
Ideally whatever I plant is something that will develop its own seed bank to help with seeding and maybe I kill the spring weeds once before they go to seed and over time reduce the weed infestation a little.
I am planning on planting a very small area. well under and acre.
The main reason I am wanting to do this is because of the fact that we always have a dry dry sept and October and my food plots don't really get attractive until late in the season. So I would like something to already be growing and productive for the deer during the first half of the season.
I will still have a fall plot almost next to this one. This will just be in an area that gets overgrown and I cut down a strip through it so I can see any deer that cuts across there.
So I am looking for a plot that I want to grow something year round like clover that is productive the in October and maybe more. Obviously JV isn't going to grow year round. That is fine. I plan to just let it die and stand unless the deer keep it mowed down to the dirt. If so then I will throw out some elbon rye after the jv is dead, but only if needed.
Ideally whatever I plant is something that will develop its own seed bank to help with seeding and maybe I kill the spring weeds once before they go to seed and over time reduce the weed infestation a little.
Posted on 5/9/22 at 9:18 am to No Colors
Anyone try planting without tilling? I have an area which stays too wet to pull a plow. Would a herbicide burn and broadcast planting work.
Posted on 5/9/22 at 1:06 pm to soileausurveying
We planted it on moist soil last year after flood water fell and it was just bare wet dirt. It did well just hand spreading.
This year we have access to a notill drill and so far that is working as well but still need more time to make a determination on it
This year we have access to a notill drill and so far that is working as well but still need more time to make a determination on it
Posted on 8/7/24 at 7:11 am to No Colors
What type of 2,4-D you are using? 24d b or just regular 24d (weedar 64).
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