There really is no such thing as "deer corn." Corn is primarily grown in two varieties: field corn, meant for livestock, and sweet corn, meant for humans. Field corn is most likely the variety or cultivar of corn you are referring to, and yes it can be fed to cattle.
Corn doesn't sweat. But sweet corn is sweet.
yes, deer corn is just dried out regular yellow corn. most deer corn comes from ears of corn that will not sell, like if it is deformed or possibly picked prematurely.
Yes. Marsh deer can and do eat corn.
Sweet corn is a monocot.
It's just whole corn. Often bags labeled "Deer Corn" are a little dirtier, have bits of cob and junk along with the whole corn. You see that mainly with deer corn purchased at Walmart. Feed stores often carry a higher grade of deer corn that doesn't have the trash in it, which is what you want if you're putting it in an automatic feeder. The chunks of cob tend to jam the feeders up. It's just whole corn. Often bags labeled "Deer Corn" are a little dirtier, have bits of cob and junk along with the whole corn. You see that mainly with deer corn purchased at Walmart. Feed stores often carry a higher grade of deer corn that doesn't have the trash in it, which is what you want if you're putting it in an automatic feeder. The chunks of cob tend to jam the feeders up.
Sweet corn is way higher in protein than regular corn.
Sweet corn is above ground. It is the fruit of the corn stalk.
You can, but if they pollinate at the same time, the sweet corn will taste all starchy and not sweet because it crossed with the field corn.
No. people grow crops of sweet corn, and feed corn. humans eat sweet corn (how ever they want) and cows get the feed corn. it's not a weed. but there are lots of different types of sweet corn too.
corn
There are 150 ears of sweet corn in a bushel.