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Started by saint, February 23, 2011, 08:59:15 PM
Quote from: nstrut on February 24, 2011, 09:24:58 PMif i had my way there would never be another tree cut period.the big trees are all gone.every tree we cut now our kids, there kids, will never see a big old tree again..i plant trees every year they are all put in the ground at a angle so they will grow crooked..they will be good for wild life but not good for the chain saw..here in s.e.ohio there are very very few trees big enough to set your back against and be safe hunting turkey
Quote from: Reloader on February 25, 2011, 11:08:49 AMClear cutting is one of the worst things for turkeys IME. Yes, it is good for one year of hunting and one year of nesting, but it's toast for over a decade afterwards. I've seen it ruin our lease. We have an 8500 acre lease that was once wrapped up in birds. Many years ago the timber co came in and cleared everything and now 90% of that 8500 acres is nothing but dense small pines with no undergrowth or solid briar thickets. The turkeys are nothing, not even close, to what they once were when we had large sections of large pine and oak that were open under the canopy. Turkeys do not like thickets at all and they hate dense small pine tracts as well. The few that remain are forced to move around each year to wherever the few cutovers or thinnings are. It's a joke, you have maybe 3-4 small areas on that size lease holding the few birds and about 30-40guys pounding the same places over and over on top of each other.The best turkey management(or wildlife management for that matter) here is to leave a certain percentage of hardwood, a certain percentage of large pine, control burn under the large pine on rotation, cutover a certain percentage, thin a certain percentage, plant enough food plots, etc. Very few timber cos around here do this, they all come in a wipe out everything bigger than your leg, replant in dense qty, thin as soon as they can make a buck, and wipe it out again a few years later. No control burns, no food plots, no large trees, and no good turkey habitat. Private land is about the only way to manage anything the proper way.The deer don't even care for the dense pine tracts, there's nothing to browse.The good ole days of large timber and beatiful turkey habitat are gone in alot of areas soley due to the timber cos.There is nothing wrong with timber operations, but there is a right way to help wildlife and a wrong way.Have a good one,Reloader