In my book, "How to Manage Native Plants for Deer," available at www.jwaynefears.com, I give many tips on managing plants and recommend you call the wildlife agent in the state where you live or plan to hunt. Then get that wildlife agent to tell you what type of naturally-occurring plants deer feed on during deer season in your region. Once you know what those plants are, fertilize a wide variety of the plants, because deer feed on many-different types of plants. The more-different kinds of deer food you can provide that are highly nutritious, the more the deer will eat those various plants.
I also suggest that you fertilize various kinds of plants that deer feed on at different times of the year. For instance, if you fertilize blackberry plants now before deer season starts, the deer may not feed on those bushes until later in the year, because the blackberry bush tends to hold its leaves later in the year than many plants do. Too, you need to fertilize oak, persimmon, apple, fruit and nut trees you identify on your property. Any tree or bush that yields food for deer can provide more food if someone fertilizes it. That food will have a higher quality because of the fertilization.
But only fertilize when the moisture condition of the soil will take in the fertilizer to keep the fertilizer from causing the plant to die. If you put the fertilizer out just before a heavy rain, the plants will receive the maximum benefit from the fertilizer. If you're trying to create more food for deer, consider fertilizing now the naturally-occurring trees, shrubs and bushes that deer eat. Then before cold weather hits, the nutrition in the fertilizer can get into the soil, benefit the plants and make the plants put-on more foliage and/or create more and bigger nuts before the deer need that food.
When you fertilize naturally-occurring plants, you create highly-productive hunting sites that other people who hunt where you hunt don't know exist. For instance, if you fertilize a patch of honeysuckle, although the property homes other patches of honeysuckle, the deer will likely come to the patch of fertilized honeysuckle, because that honeysuckle has more-nutritious leaves than the honeysuckle not fertilized. Therefore, you can concentrate deer on a naturally-occurring plant species. To see videos of some of the most-common naturally-occurring plants that deer eat and how to care for them, go to www.facebook.com.
If you start your deer-management program immediately by fertilizing naturally-occurring plants that the deer feed on, you dramatically can impact and improve the health of your deer herd as well as increase the odds for taking that buck of your dreams this season.
-- J. Wayne Fears
