On your soil test…..it looks like you just need some P and a little Ca…….then however much N to produce your desired yield. What have you added over the last year or so? Your K is pretty high.
As far as bringing in worms….I’m not for sure what the secret ingredient is on that one. I think a lot of it has to do with soil moisture and OM.
This was my first soil test in these areas. Prior to the test, nothing had been added, at least since we moved here in '95. After the test: Lime, 12-12-12, Urea. Then, some Miracle Gro. (Note to self: Experiment more w/ foliar fertilizer in throw n' mow plots, especially in areas with compacted soils).
Years ago we had cattle, and some of the samples came from areas where I'd fed hay back then.
re: worms
Our walkout basement has a garage door on one side. Every leaf that falls off of every tree within 5 miles of here gets sucked up between our retaining walls, and ends up in a pile against the garage door. A couple of winters ago, the leaves stayed there for a while before I had a chance to rake them away. When I finally got a chance to get rid of the leaves, there were more redworms in there than I have ever seen in one place. These things had to crawl across a 15 foot slab to get into those nasty, wet, concrete-staining leaves. If I was a worm, I would freakin' HATE concrete.
Anyway, I've wondered if piles of wet leaves, with limbs and whatnot on top to hold them in place, would attract and concentrate worms in and around food plots.
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