Great video! My experience with Plot Start...I've had better luck with actual liquid lime products. The lime we need to improve our PH is calcium carbonate. Plotstart has the "readily available calcium" but missing the carbonate. Calcium alone, while extremely beneficial to the crop, will not change PH. I'm not by any means knocking your method, I just know none of this stuff is cheap, so sharing my experience so that you may get the most for your money, time, and effort! Keep up the good work, here's to a successful season!!!!
@@VanceVenisonOutdoors I 1000% hear ya and see where you’re coming from. If you have a liquid lime product ud recommend I’m all ears! Next year I’ll do a comparison video. I’m always into trying new things!
@jaytacoutdoors I had really good luck with Plot Dr Liquid Lime. If you look at the back of a bag of lime, you will see the calcium carbonate equivalent, CCE. I think of that as the 'purity'of the lime, the higher the CCE, the more of an impact it will have on the PH. Plot Dr liquid lime has the ingredients listed on the container, derived from calcium carbonate and has the CCE. If im not mistaken, plotstart is calcium phosphate, so there is no CCE. Im not a chemist, but it could possibly be argued that the phosphate, a salt, could be counterproductive and negativity impact the PH. My property is in the Southeast, I started with a 4.72 PH. Lots of work but now I'm at 6.0 in one and 6.5 in the other. It is worth saying, however, the liquid lime isn't my end all be all. I still use pelletized lime, for longevity. Liquid Lime gets it there quicker...but won't last as long. Again, just food for thought and sharing what I've learned from researching some of these things as I try to make the most of my property as well!!
So the first link is to the wildcat 2, the one I like most. The 2nd and 3rd links are ones I was able to find still in that “budget” category because my trufire and cabelas releases aren’t made anymore.
@@jaytacoutdoors I show it on my channel. It would be cool seeing you do it on yours. I'm heavier and older than you and it is easy, safe, and quiet for me. I can't see why anyone who likes to saddle hunt wouldn't love it.
Deer season is getting closer and closer everybody. Let me know if you have any questions around my seed blends or just let me know what you people are doing as far as food plots go!
@@jaytacoutdoors when you shoot from a tree stand and the platform is at let’s say is at 10 feet and you stand to shoot you increase the angle by about 4-5 feet but when sitting the angle the angle is cut down to 2-3 feet
Thank you! Very good advice! Also some ideas are shooting from stalking and kneeling positions if you could imagine stalking anything. Also remember that it helps tremendously to take your qiver off in windy conditions, helps a ton. I personally always shoot with my quiver off. I can hold at full draw much longer, and am more accurate. You did a great job of covering some "unthought of" tips! Hope you get a big one this year! God bless
@@WoodsboyMike REALLY good point about practicing from stalking positions, that would be very critical especially if hunting out west or Midwest, Good Luck to you too this year!!!!
Thank you! And even if you don't anticipate stalking deer, you could bump into deer while going to and/or from your stand, forcing you to crouch or kneel, putting you in a stalking position even though no stalking was planned.
This is something that really help me set my saddle hunting platform properly. Let me know what ya think or if you have any helpful hints on platform placement.