Food Plots
The essential requirements for virtually any wild animal are the same: food, cover, water, and space. Managed food plots seek to improve wildlife habitat by providing larger quantities of nutritious foods, usually in the form of managed herbaceous openings or cultivated plots.
Natural Food Plot
The most economical food plots can be created simply by liming and fertilizing to stimulate the growth of native plants. Fertilization and/or discing usually improves the nutritional quality of native plants, but to avoid wasting time and money, conduct a soil test before applying fertilizer.

Planted Annual Plots
Cultivated food plots are often an ill attempt to improve the quality of food for wildlife. Keep in mind that in order to significantly improve the level of nutrition for any particular wildlife species, about 10% of the land base should be cultivated and dedicated solely to that species.
Small (1-2 acre) cultivated food plots do, however, have value in wildlife management when used to attract animals for harvest and observation. Food plots should be managed for moderate production, maximizing edge, and cover. There is little or no benefit for wildlife by increasing food production at the expense of escape cover.
Generally, food plots should be irregular in shape (preferably linear) and strategically placed throughout an area to provide diversity and edge. They should not be developed adjacent to major roads or other access routes. Abandoned logging roads, skid trails, and log decks can be opened or daylighted so that a reasonable stand of cultivated plants can be grown.
If you're interested in information on deer food plots, please see the Plantings to Attract Deer in Virginia section of our Web site.
Brood Food Plots
Young
birds require a high protein diet to rapidly put on weight and
develop feathers. Quail and turkey poults have a higher survival
when they can forage for bugs in a short time frame, so they are
exposed to predation as briefly as possible. Fill them with bugs
as quickly as possible—that’s the goal! So try a brood planting
to get more of your birds from the nest hatch into the fall.
Early spring is a great time for these plantings, and they will
have plenty of bugs by the time nests hatch!
Consider planting a quail/turkey brood patch next to a woodlot, hedgerow or other woody cover. A simple planting of 10 lbs Korean lespedeza and 1 to 2 lbs of partridgepea makes a great brood patch—a bug-rich stand with enough height to shield the young from the eyes of predators. A mixture of 4 lbs ladino clover and 4-5 lbs orchardgrass will also produce an abundance of insects and enough overhead cover to protect the young birds.
Certain plantings will attract different species of wildlife. Contact a wildlife biologist at the VDGIF office nearest you for help determining the best plantings that will attract the critters you desire.