Testimonials

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Hello John,

I wanted to share with you my first buck of the year. He grosses 150" and it is on film. He was eating in a standing soybean and buckforage oat field. Thanks for a great product.

Kandi Kisky
Kisky Productions
29008 172nd ST
Garden Grove, IA 50103
641-443-2227

Joe's Buck

We live in Hart Co. Kentucky and have about a half acre of buck forage oats planted on the edge of a big clover field. These 3 nice bucks seem to love the oats .. My 13 yr old son was lucky enough to harvest one of them.

The Crain Family

I would just like to say I’ve been using Buck Forage oats for four years now and there is no other food plot on the market that is even close. I’ve planted the other big name brands near the oats and the deer graze it to the ground where they hardly touch the other kinds. Last year I planted stripes on old logging roads, set up game tracking cameras, and got pictures day and night. The remarkable thing about it was the deer at night were does, and the deer in the day were bucks. So it goes with out saying that you can pull the bucks to the oats like a magnet, and change there nocturnal way. I wouldn’t use anything else, even if I received it for free, thanks for
such a good product

Tim Herndon
Abingdon,VA

Morgan,
Finally planted my plots two weeks ago after waiting 8 weeks to get some rain. Prior to the planting, I have seen very little sign in my area of the hunting club(330 acres total). In September I turned the very poor clay/sand soil and put down 2 tons/lime per acre. Then 2-3 weeks ago, I fertilized with 0-20-20 and 0-46-0 at 200# each per acre. Then I planted a mixture of your product and a Fall Blend product I bought at a sports expo. It rained the night after my planting and the oats were 1.5 inches tall a week later. Of course now it has rained almost daily for the past 2 weeks. I am seeing the oats as well as some of the fall blend emerging. Now, two weeks later, I can't place my hand on the ground without touching a track. I am excited about the upcoming Mississippi rifle season November 17. Will let you know how things turn out.

David Rochester
Horn Lake, MS

Jake,
I just sent you an email with a picture of a 15 pt buck from Tennessee. This is him in your testimonial section as a 3 1/2 year old sent from Glen. Thought it would give you a great before an after. After 3 years he is still something to talk about. Thanks for helping us keep him around all this time.

Dwayne Stubblefield

Jake,
I just sent you an email with a picture of a 15 pt buck from Tennessee. This is him in your testimonial section as a 3 1/2 year old sent from Glen. Thought it would give you a great before an after. After 3 years he is still something to talk about. Thanks for helping us keep him around all this time.

Dwayne Stubblefield

Dear Sirs;
I am writing to comment on your Buck Forage Oats product. I plant many food plots in three different states every year. This year I tried your Buck Forage Oats for the first time. I admit, I was skeptical at first, having tried just about all the other products that have been touted so heavily by the recent media blitz of food plot products. Yours is the only product that I have tried thus far that has lived up to its claims. I am indeed impressed. I planted a small 1 ½ acre plot in Iowa this year. I also planted about 15 acres of soybeans and corn in separate food plots there, as well as more than an acre of ladino clover. There were more deer, and surprisingly, more mature bucks on the small oat plot, than all the other plots combined. It was truly amazing to watch multiple bucks and does feeding out in the open at one time. In my experience, mature bucks will not leave cover during daylight hours to come into an opening. They came out into the oats regularly. Perhaps the temptation of dozens of does feeding and passing through was too much for them. Whatever the reason, the bucks were there regularly. I will be planting many more food plots of Buck Forage Oats next season. Thank you for a product that really works.

John Young
Agribucks LLC

I took a decent 150-class buck last week in Iowa while hunting near our food plot. We spotted this buck and a 165 class on Saturday evening. I was busy moving stands for our hunters and working on our house, so I didn’t get to hunt until Monday evening. I passed on a 140-class 8-point the first evening and saw multiple deer heading to the food plot. On Tuesday evening, the second evening of my hunt, I heard a buck grunt and looked up to see this buck coming toward me. He was not the big one we had seen on Saturday, but when he passed within 8 yards of me, he was good enough. It is amazing how the big bucks and all the deer in the area are drawn to these oats. This stuff is hands down the most effective deer draw I have ever seen. My only concern is that if too many people start using it, there won’t be any big bucks left!

Thanks again for a truly impressive product.

John Young

John,
Attached is a buck one of our clients shot in a Buck Forge Food Plot. The buck was standing in the plot when it was killed. The night prior, our client had 4 bucks in the plot including a 170". Thanks for the great product, It has been working wonders this year.

Justin Roach
UrgeMedia, Inc.
77 Franklin Street, Suite 514
Boston, MA 02110

Hey, not much time to talk, look at this HOG. I shot him last sat. saw him Friday morning. Both times he was chasing does. I shot him at 9 feet. Try that on a moving buck with a Vari X 3 with 2.5 power.
I have 3 pics of him this summer.
Green score gross 159 4/8", with only a 15 2/8" spread.

Derrick Backus

To the Buck Forage Staff,
Buck Forage Oats are great!  This fall was the second year I planted the oats and they draw deer like nothing else I have ever planted.  Enclosed are some pictures of bucks that regularly fed in the plat. There was a big 7 point and a big 8 point that I was on the oats plot but I could never get a good picture of them, Evan after moving the camera to different trails coming into the oats plot. I have seen as many as five bucks on my one acre plot at one time. The rain this year made planting and getting anything to grow very difficult. Most seed just got drowned, or washed away. I look forward to planting the Buck Forage Oats and Chicory again next year.

Todd Kring
Devon, PA

To the folks @ Buck Forage Oats,
We planted the oats in late August and, I really didn’t even think that they were going to grow! The deer were eating them as they were sprouting up! I live in central Illinois and there is a lot of nutritous things that the deer have to eat. But when all of our surrounding neighbors are planting food plots of corn, winter wheat, soybeans, and clover we wanted something different. That is when we got to looking around on the internet and reading articles, watching T. V. and found your product.  I have seen a great more number of deer in our hunting area, as a result of that I thought I would show you a picture of a good buck I killed in mid October on an archery hunt. 

Thanks,

Brandon Edrington
Homer, IL

I've experimented with almost every planting available on small plots here in Southwest Virginia. After hunting over BFO in Georgia last year I had to give them a try. Germination and growth has been quick, and deer are eating it. It will be interesting to observe how the deer feed in one plot that has a strip of BFO between two strips of clover, each in equal thirds of the plot. I have a camera that I'm using that is set up right along the line between the BFO and clover. So far the BFO are seeing more action. Next big test is how well it does in the winter here at 2500'. Here are a couple of shots taken last week.

Robert Hale

I wrote you earlier this year about my BFO food plot.You asked for pictures.Here you go.

This buck was taken right in the food plot during the rut.Opening day of shotgun season in southern Illinois. This food plot is the most active food plot in the entire hunting area around my property.  It is tucked in between 2 corn fields on my 12 acres. I needed something that would draw the deer to me during hunting hours.  I have used several different seeds in the past but NOTHING works this well. NOTHING!!!!!!!!!! This is a nice 10 pointer taken opening day of gun season in Illinois.  The mount is my 130 class P$Y, 9 pointer taken in the same BFO food plot last bow season.  Thanks guys for a product that works so well I know any day I can go down to my little honey hole as some friends named it for me.  I have gotten several other friends in the area to try it out and they are loving the action they are seeing.

Thanks again BFO for the great deer and hunting I have experienced since using your product.

Albert Burgess
Dongola, IL

Hi Morgan:
Here are the new & better pictures. You had made mention to me the other day that the deer should start looking for the oats soon. You were absolutely right - Holy smokes did they ever find them. Four days ago I was wondering and I went to look this morning and I cant believe how much they ate. I think I will put up one of those 1 foot circle fences in the middle of the plot to see how much they really are eating. If you still have the old /other pictures I sent to you last week - look at the difference - you can see the amount they ate on them I think. Anyway here are the pictures for your web page. I'll show you the results of the hunt later. I am not really a horn hunter - although have killed some monsters in the past - but I have to fill the freezer first. Have never acquired a taste for Horn soup. But I tell you there were Two more scrapes - one under the over hanging dead limb in pic#1 - he got pretty serious with that one. Talk to you later I’m not going to mow now - the deer already did it for me!!!!!!!!

Todd Oonk

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Robert Hale 1

I'm from Northwestern PA. I've planted your Buck Forage Oats several times in the last 5 years. We've had great success with it. We planted it in a 1 acre plot, which was an old pasture.The deer mow it to the ground. Since then I've joined a lease of 500 acres. It is all wooded with two big ridges on both sides with a creek bottom in the middle which dissects the property. It lies between two huge farms that have hay fields and corn. The fields are too vast to try and pinpoint an ambush on the deer as they enter the fields from all over. I was interested in planting a logging road down near the creek bottom in front of one of my stands. It is between to good bedding areas of Mountain Laurel . It would be a great secluded staging area for the early season and a great place for a buck to scent check for a doe during the rut. The plot would be an 1/8 to 1/4 acre in size. It would be linear in shape, around 5 foot wide and about 40 yards long. The tree canopy in the section I want to plant is pretty open. It would probably receive about 4- 5 hours of late morning to early afternoon sun. It has some type of grasses growing on it now. I was planning on spraying it with round up, wait until it turns brown and then disc it with my atv disc. Apply my lime and fertilizer and then broadcast your oats and disc again. Do you fill this will work? Open for suggestions.

Thanks,

Tom

 

Morgan-

Thank you for the response. A buddy of mine has been using the buck forage oats on his plot for the past few years and it is amazing the deer that he shoots compared to the other members in the club using other game mixes. I personally have never used the Buck Forage Oats but this year I will definitely be using it. Last year I purchased the product called Spike. It is horrible. I had to spread Gulf Rye in the middle of November b/c Spike's growth was horrible. And I spent 4 months getting the soil right for growth; It was not due to lack of rain either b/c it rained everyday for a week 2 days after I planted. There is a large population of deer where I hunt and only seen deer on the plot 1 time. This is an area where seeing 10 to 15 deer a hunt is not uncommon. Thank you for taking the time to talk.

Barrett McCreary
Slidell, LA

In July of 06 we bought 10 bags of Buck Forage Oats. We have several food plots north of Detroit Lakes in northwestern MN. In one of our plots we have about 8-10 acres back in the woods that we have been putting into beans and corn for the past few years. Aug. 20th of 06 we disked down about 4 acres or so of the beans and put in the Buck Forage Oats, it rained a few days after that. The oats came up thick and lush. We had a great stand of oats all fall and the deer were in there all through bow season, firearms and black powder, and well into the winter, they grazed those oats down right through the snow to the dirt long after the oats were no longer green. The area we have our food plots in is mostly forest with some hay fields and corn also, but no beans. So by the end of October the deer would have all of our beans totally cleaned up. So we were looking for something that would last longer and hold the deer in that area into the winter, and the oats for sure did that. At times in my bow stands I would have deer laying right out in the oat field, not even walking around just laying there eating oats. We are putting more in this year 07 and going to try some on an old logging road that we have cleared and sprayed with Round Up and going to disk up. Cant wait for the 07 hunting season.

Sincerely,
Steve Kohlhepp
Maple Grove, Mn 55369

I have used Buck Forage oats on my property for the last three years. I own 56 acres in Gadsden County, Florida, which has several different types of soil and moisture conditions. The majority of the property is very sandy, while the bottoms contain a little better soil. With only discing and adding 100 lbs per acre of 10-10-10 fertilizer, I have beautiful food plots that last all season. We can put out corn as bait here in Florida, as long as it is year round. In addition to Buck Forage oats, I keep corn out year round. I have actually on many occasions witnessed deer walk right by the corn and proceed to feed in my Buck Forage oats. All of my plots receive heavy grazing by deer, but they always come back.

I have tried a lot of the high dollar brands of seed, only to be disappointed. Most would not grow in my poor soil, and those that did, the deer did not eat them. Your product not only grows well, but my deer love it.

Thanks for producing such an incredible product.

Frank Richardson
Gadsden County, Florida

 

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Buck Forage Products P.O. Box 43 Stuttgart, Arkansas 72160
Phone: 1-800-299-6287 or 870-673-2706 Fax: 870-673-2468
Email: buckforage@centurytel.net