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No Till Food Plots - So Easy

The 3 F's...fuel, fertilizer, Fe😉

It's a balance. I know plenty of 25yr+ no till farmers and others that turn n burn with high speed tillage each spring n fall. Each farm is different and each field is different. You have to turn the dirt every few years to rejuvenate the process is what I have seen.

It is certainly a tool in the toolbox, and depending on fertility management (the types of nutrients applied), you will likely see significant yield benefits from rotational tillage. This is largely due to nutrient stratification (when nutrients are separated or unevenly distributed throughout the root zone), which most often occurs when cover crops are not used, as well as a heavier reliance on surface-applied P and K in heavier soils.

As you mention, it is always a balance, and that is what I truly love about each test/soil - they are all unique.
 
When I first started this garden, my tiller couldn’t even break the ground. It bounced across the surface like a dirt track race on an August night, dust flying as high as the new house.

The soil was basically a brick factory.

I knew that with no-till practices, cover crops, and organic amendments we would start to make progress. What I didn’t expect was how quickly it would happen.

Today the soil is full of aggregation, living roots, and earthworms. The biology is coming alive and the tomato yields have been incredible.

Healthy soil doesn’t happen overnight, but when you feed the biology and let nature do the work, the transformation can happen faster than you think.

From brick to biology.

I can’t wait to see what 2026 brings.

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There are a lot of opinions on clover seeding rates.

At Vitalize Seed, we typically recommend around 6 lbs per acre for perennial clover mixes. Sometimes growers go a little higher depending on conditions, but through years of trial, error, and referencing university research, one thing becomes clear.

Over time, clover stands tend to self regulate to around 8 to 12 plants per square foot.

Many extension sources note that mature white clover stands commonly stabilize around this density as plants spread through stolons and natural reseeding.

Because of that, there are really two different schools of thought when it comes to clover establishment.

Some growers seed very heavy, sometimes 12, 18, even 20 lbs per acre, and allow the stand to thin down naturally over time.

Others seed lighter, allow the clover to establish, and if needed frost seed the following year, which many people do regardless of stand density.

At Vitalize Seed, we also include a small amount of annual clovers as a nurse crop within our perennial clover blends. These establish quickly, help suppress weeds, and allow the perennial clovers time to get established.

The end result is often the same, a mature stand that settles into roughly 8 to 12 plants per square foot.

This topic sometimes gets framed as companies trying to sell more seed or less seed. In reality, it is usually just a difference in establishment strategy and management approach.

#soilhealth #covercrops #clover #regenerativeag #foodplots #vitalizeseed
 
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