I do love planting food plots and seeing all the animals benefit from them. I think I've gone to far and want to watch and film more than shoot any more thus the doe problem. When I started my lease and plots, after the 1st year I could see the difference in all the animals.
I started like may using BOB and 1 acre plot. The next year 2 acres, again with BOB. Here's where it gets bad; 3rd year buy another tractor so I don't wear out my main lawn tractor planted 3 acres. 4th year I buy a 6ft grain drill and a 2 row planter

and planted 5 acres. Now I'm up to about 10 acres. The biggest surprise in success that I've had has been corn. Corn generally is difficult to obtain success with but, has been good for me. I credit this to the planter having a fertilizer box and spraying gly once the corn reaches about 6-8 inches high.
Another unexpected success was with PPT, did a spray, throw and mow and had turnips the size of soft balls.
Now here's the best thing I've done thus far; Egyptian wheat. I have a private driveway that runs alongside one of my fields that gets constant use. I planted a 12 ft strip of Egyptian wheat along the driveway and it grew 10-14 ft tall and thick as dog hair. The bucks would come out any time of the day now and stay in the plot.
My original Imperial whitetail clover patch is about 1/2 acre and has been going strong for about 8 years with only 1 supplemental frost seeding. When I started this plot, I put in winter wheat and come back in March and seeded with the imperial clover. Came back a few months later and the WW was about 3 ft tall. When I mowed the WW, there was the prettiest patch of clover you'd ever want to see.
Here's my list of things planted: corn, beans, cowpeas, turnips, radishes, millet, winter wheat, Egyptian wheat, sunflowers, power plant, fusion, whitetail imperial clover, medium red clover, white clover.