Hi all...
While I appreciate all of the input, I had no desire to turn this thread into a confrontation between east and west.

We are all hunters and maybe we should learn to appreciate the differences in style and topography.
To give you an example, some of the guys I hunt with also hunt the rifle season using dogs. This is a traditional method that has been used for a very long time in Ontario and Quebec . Some hunters like the idea, other do not and therefore do not partake.
With the vast crops out west, low urban densities etc, you guys out west have some of the best deer in the world and many of them appear in the record book. Your deer are well fed and can avail themselves of a wide variety of foods and various supplements to their diets.
In the east it is a different story.
Urban densities are higher. More habitat has been destroyed through cultivation and logging over the past 200 years.
More people, more cars etc. Many more folks are surprisingly anti-hunter.
This generally results in more land being posted, thereby limiting the number of places one can hunt.
I do recall other suggestions being made here in this thread that do not involve "food plots".
Ponds, thinning of the underbrush, prunning of trees, reforrestation and the the planting of Native Warm Summer Grasses.
Now I am only a high-tech sort of guy, and do not work in the the "habitat restoration" business, but all these things sound to me like restoration and not remotely akin to food plots.
I have no doubt that I will plant some different types of foods. Clover being one of them. This is a native plant according to all of the aggy and MNR guys here. In fact there are over 300 species of "trefoil" native to North America, and according to the MNR one of the main sources of fodder for deer, moose and elk. So if it is a food plot...so be it. But it was likely plowed under when they planted the wheat , barley or corn.
So I may not be a purist, but I still see that as helping the deer regardless or whether it is habitiat improvement or a food plot.
Along with the other great suggestions, I know that it is likely that the property will support more wildlife than not.
So I want to thank everyone that contributed here. Again it was not my intent to pit hunter against hunter or east against west...it was simply to improve the property. And if a better bigger deer came out of the mix, then all the better for me and my camp.