20:20 I'm puzzled. Cool season grasses as of little food value? Presumably you mean '....for deer', since these grasses are preferred by farmers for grazing for cattle. And yet, both cattle & deer are ruminants. Is there digestive difference, or does the difference in value of habitat lie only in the value of cover to deer?
Deer eat little to no grass at all. I’m amazed at how many hunters I meet planting rye grass in their plots. They had no idea deer don’t eat it. They will eat cereal rye though. Some tall grasses like switchgrass and Egyptian wheat are great for screening food plots as deer don’t like eating out in the open.
Prickly ash is native to missouri.
20:20 I'm puzzled. Cool season grasses as of little food value? Presumably you mean '....for deer', since these grasses are preferred by farmers for grazing for cattle. And yet, both cattle & deer are ruminants. Is there digestive difference, or does the difference in value of habitat lie only in the value of cover to deer?
Cows are grazers and deer are browsers. They definitely have different preferences in food but there are things they both like.
Deer eat little to no grass at all. I’m amazed at how many hunters I meet planting rye grass in their plots. They had no idea deer don’t eat it. They will eat cereal rye though. Some tall grasses like switchgrass and Egyptian wheat are great for screening food plots as deer don’t like eating out in the open.
Deer don't eat grass. They browse on herbaceous growth, saplings, fruits and nuts.
Very informative. Thanks!