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Spring and Summer (Page 2)[ Spring and Summer: Page 2 | New Bow Season and Winter Mix | Fall and Winter | Our Wildlife Planting Tips | What to Plant This Month | Accessories | Feed | Inoculates | Wildlife Fertilizers | Weed Control in Food Plots ] Cooperseeds.com is launching a photo album to allow you to share your planting experiences with fellow hunters. We are searching for pictures of your food plots that were planted with seeds purchased from Cooper Seeds, with photos of both the field and close-ups. To send us your photos, please visit our photo submission page.
Golden Rule: When in doubt of what, when, where or how to plant, check with your county extension agent, Department of Natural Resources or www.cooperseeds.com.
If there are some types of plants or seeds you want and can't find, get in touch with us. Our Guarantee - We want you to be happyCooperseeds.com policy is to offer our customers the highest quality seeds available. We adhere to state and federal seed laws regarding the restriction of weed seeds considered noxious by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Each lot of seed is tested every 9 months to ensure that the seed we offer for sale retains vitality. All seed is described on the container within recognized tolerances in the trade. This is the sole warranty: We make none, either expressed or implied. We cannot guarantee establishment of plants due of various factors over which we have no control. Seeds not accepted under these terms must be returned within 30 days. Our liability is limited to the purchase price of the seed only. Prices listed do not include shipping and handling. Order Early! Availability of seeds and prices
are subject to change without notice due to reasons beyond our control. Some of our special mixes require a two-day advance notice. Call ahead if you plan on picking them up at the store. |
Check out our new lower prices!
Spring Summer wildlife mix (ice cream mix) | ||
All types of wildlife love this mix>. Put together by a Senior Wildlife Biologist. 20 lbs. iron and clay peas. 10 lbs. tyrome climbing soybeans. 10 lbs. lab lab bean. 5 lbs. KS 989 -- wildlife will not eat this sorghum until it full matures! plants one acre.cover 1 inch plant 2 weeks after danger of frost. 45 lb. bag--$69.99 Must plant on full acre. Cover no deeper than one inch. Last up to frost. These are custom blends so call before coming and we will have them ready for you. | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
Quail Haven Soybeans | ||
Reseeding, viney soybean with each plant producing five to six runners 15 to 20 feet long and will climb such crops as corn, Egyptian wheat and Cooper\'s Hybrid Sorghum. Quail Haven Soybeans can produce five tons of plant matter per year when planted alone. When inter-planted with silage corn or milo, it produces excellent forage for cattle and wildlife. Produces 25 to 35% protein, depending on soil and fertilizer. Plant 15 to 20 lbs. per acre or 10 lbs. with corn. When planted alone, use 300 lbs. 00.20.20 or when inter-planted use 400 lbs. 10.10.10. Plant April thru July. It is green until frost. For all types of wildlife including Deer, Turkey and Quail. Buy 50 lbs. for $169.95 1 lb. $4.49 Please Type In The Amount You Need In The Quantity Box. New Seeds and New 2008 Price | ||
Quantity: lbs. | $Call |
Cooper's Summer & Fall Buchshot Mix | ||
This Is Another Great Mix That When Eaten Keeps Coming Back. Contains Tall Okra And Catjangs Peas. 18 Pound Bag Covers One Full Acre. Cover 1/4 inch Plant After May Running Pea That Can Re-Seed Itself. Pea Climbs Okra. Fertilizer=Results! These are custom blends so call before coming and we will have them ready for you. $29.95 | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
Cooper's Cattail millet | ||
cattail millet n : tall grass having cattail like spikes; grown in Africa and Asia for its grain and in the United States chiefly for forage; sometimes used in making beer [syn: pearl millet, bulrush millet, Pennisetum glaucum, Pennisetum Americanum] Marshes are areas of standing water that sustain water-loving plants such as cattail , sedge, arrowhead, bulrush and native grasses. There are no trees in a Marsh. Sedge meadows, wet meadows, prairie pot holes and shallow wetlands are kinds of marshes. Cattail provedes food and shelter for many animals. If you have land that is too wet in spring and too wet to harvest if fall this is your plant. Pearl (Cattail) Cattail MILLET Pearl Millet is grown as a food grain and its stalks used for fodder. Grows exceptionally wall, even on poor dry infertile soils from 5 to 6 feet tall and produces a s@ head from 6 to 1 6 inches long, Good feed and cover for all upland game birds, waterfowl, deer, etc. Grows 6 to 8 feet tall and matures in 3 months. Late spring to early summer Well-drained soil with a pH level of 5.5-6.6 Drill seed at 15 lbs./acre or broadcast at 20-25 lbs./acre Soils Pearl millet, like most crops, thrives best on rich soils, but it is also suited for sandy soils. It tends to produce higher tonnage than the foxtail millets or sudangrass on sandy soils. The crop tolerates poor, infertile soils better than most other crops. Stand Establishment Planting into a firm, mellow, moist seedbed is an important step in successful pearl millet production. Pearl millet seed is small, so shallow planting 1/2 to 1 inch deep into firm seedbed to obtain good seed-to-soil contact is critical. Field trials have shown that when a firm seedbed is lacking, poor emergence is common and stand failures occur. Plant into a weed-free seedbed after all danger of frost is past. A soil temperature of 65 to 70 degrees Fahrenheit is recommended for faster germination and stand establishment. Pearl millet can be planted throughout the growing season if moisture is present for germination. Plant no earlier than late May, with early to mid June recommended. Planting date may depend on whether intended use is hay, silage or pasture. Normally, pearl millet can be grazed four to six weeks after planting. Plant 15 to 20 pounds of seed per acres if solid seeding or broadcasting pearl millet. Seed 7 to 10 pounds per acre if planting in 30 to 42 inch rows. Heavier seeding rates should produce finer stems. Plant in no more than 2 inches of water. Sunlight must hit seeds to germinate OUT 1 Lb. $. 50 Lbs. $ Please Type In The Amount You Need In The Quantity Box. | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
Crown Vetch | ||
Erosion Control This is a permanent ground cover that spreads quickly. Cover no more than 1/2 inch deep. Use 10 lbs. per acre. $ per lb. Now In Stock. Perennial Legume Plant For Quail, Dove And Deer. Fertilizer=Results! Please Type In The Amount You Need In The Quantity Box. | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
Cooper's Summer Wet Area Mix | ||
Ideal For Summer Wet Areas. Ideal for deer, turkey, quail, dove, and duck. Buy 50 lbs. for only $79.95 This is the best you can buy. It has a full 10 lbs of aeschynomene in it along with tyrome forage soybeans, buckwheat and japanese millet. Contains: 30% Forage Soybeans 30% Buckwheat 20% Aeschynomene 20% Japanese Millet Fertilizer=Results! These are custom blends so call before coming and we will have them ready for you. $79.95 | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
New Rice Seed For Georgia Duck Ponds | ||
A Report on Growing Rice for Ducks in North Georgia Cypress Rice Seed By: Kent Kammermeyer Senior Wildlife Biologist Last summer I was given a bag of domestic rice by William Cooper of Cooper Seed Company in Lawrenceville to test for its growth potential in North Georgia. I have a four-acre pond with a flashboard riser stacked with 6 inch boards. In early July, at full pool, we loaded up the seed and cyclone seeder in my 12 foot semi-V aluminum boat and broadcast the 50 pounds of rice in as shallow water as we could run the boat with electric motor and out to depths of about 1 � feet deep. Then over the course of the next week, I gradually dropped my pond about a foot exposing a half acre of mud and creating another half acre of water less than 6 inches deep. The rice is supposed to germinate in up to 6 inches of clear water and it did. I got a very good stand on the mud flat and in the shallow water. My intention was to raise the water back up to full pool to flood the mud flat again, but I could not do it because of the drought. Nevertheless, the dryland rice did fairly well. In August, when it was thigh high or higher and trying to send up a seed head, I noticed a few stalks floating on the water, then a few more, then a lot. Within a two week period beavers and/or muskrats had cut all the stems at ground level, apparently ate a little of the stem and the rest floated away! What a disappointment! Despite the failure, I'm convinced you can successfully grow domestic rice for ducks in North Georgia if you don't have beavers or muskrats or you can practice beaver and muskrat control (usually trapping or shooting). If you have the critters and can't get rid of them, you may want to stick with the old standby Japanese millet. Kent Kammermeyer Senior Wildlife Biologist Wildlife Resources Division Game Management Section 2150 Dawsonville Highway Gainesville, Georgia 30501 Fertilizer=Results! One Of The Biggest Mistakes Hunters Make Is Putting Down Too Many Seed And Too Little Fertilizer On Their Food Plots 50 pounds . Type in amount needed. Please Type In The Amount You Need In The Quantity Box. SOLD OUT | ||
Quantity: lbs. | $Call |
Round - Up Ready Soybeans | ||
50 Lb. bag SOLD OUT FOR THE SEASON | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
Round - Up Ready Corn | ||
SOLD OUT FOR THE SEASON | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
Tyrone Forage Soybeans | ||
Food plots and forage soybeans Sep 28, 2001 12:00 PM By David Bennett Farm Press Editorial Staff SENATOBIA, Miss. A few days ago, a man who walked into this field may have thought he\'d stumbled into a fairytale land of giants. Tyrone soybean plants were so high that seeing the hardwoods ringing the field even from a pick-up cab was impossible. The bushy variety, which can grow from 5 feet to 7 feet tall depending on the soil variety it\'s planted in, blotted out the horizon. Then 2.5 inches of rain hit quickly, pounding the giant soybean plants into a matted (although still 3-foot-tall) lush, pod-heavy carpet. These are the giant soybeans you have been looking for to feed your deer. Deer eat them and they keep coming back. More drought resistant. Fertilizer=Results! New 2006 Price 50 lb. Bag For Only-$27.95 CROP FAILURE FOR 2008 | ||
Quantity: | $Call |
Silver Mine O.P. Corn | ||
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Silver Mine has round ears that taper at the end, with small white cobs, and kernels that are of medium width and depth with a smooth to rough dent. Its stalks and foliage are not as heavy as other varieties. Matures in 98 to 105 days. SOLD OUT FOR THE SEASON. | |
Quantity: | $Call |
Zone References
N/A = Not Applicable for Zone
U = Upper Zone 5 only
L = Lower Zone 5 only
*map courtesy of Pennington
Click here to view Cooper's Fall & Early Spring Seed Chart,
Click here to view Cooper's Spring & Summer Seed Chart.
These planting guides are based on the zone you live in and were
made especially for Cooper's Seed and Feed by
Kent Kammermeyer,
Senior Wildlife Biologist
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Check with your local county extension agent and/or Department of Natural Resources for suitable planting dates and other vital information.
Some of the seed varieties we sell have been treated, so please wash your hands after handling.
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