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Started by PaytonWP, June 22, 2020, 10:40:05 PM
Quote from: ChesterCopperpot on June 23, 2020, 08:24:12 AMWhere I hunt in South Carolina most of its pine timber holdings with forest service easements. I think what was said about age class of pines above is important. The young thick plantings I rarely see turkeys using at all, but I see lots of deer using it for cover especially late season after leaf drop when the bucks push into the thickest places they can find. Obviously hardwoods are prettier woods to look at and offer mast but since most are talking about how pines are a detriment to game I'll just toss out a few examples of ways I've seen them using it year after year down there. First and foremost, I think we always want to talk about mast mast mast, acorn acorns acorns, when the reality is that makes up a very small window in an annual diet. Not to say it's not important, obviously it is, but if they lived or died off acorns they'd have to have feed the game for a penny a day commercials running on the TV from mid-November to mid-September. So a few benefits, one, they tend to burn the pines a lot more than they do the hardwoods where I hunt and they do it late winter / early spring meaning a whole lot of open country for birds come April. If they've just burned the woods you better be in there because I will guarantee those birds will be picking through it like a barbecue. Ask a forester and they'll tell you the same thing. They burn and the birds will be there the next day. I've killed a dozen birds with ash up to their knees. In the months after the burn you get the green up with grass filling the understory. This past year they actually sowed clover in a lot of the burns I hunted and it was gorgeous. The deer and turkey were in heaven with food coming out their ears, likewise good places to hide nests and fawns. The last thing I'll say is, when they log, those first five years after the cut make for some places the turkey and deer love, especially the deer. Lots of new growth, briary browse that holds deer over through winter, bugs and soft greens and nesting cover for turkey and quail. From everything I've read and seen, game thrives in disturbance. With most places being unwilling and/or unable to actively manage forest anymore (for instance in the mountains of North Carolina where I live), active pine offers one of the few places with scheduled and regimented disturbance. Luckily down there where I hunt it's mixed enough too that you still get the hardwoods and pastureland next to the pines. The more diversity in a place the better it seems to be.
Quote from: Sixes on June 23, 2020, 08:38:58 AMAre some of you guys saying that timber companies burn their pines? I've leased from a timber company for 25 years and they have never burned our pines. I wish they would at least every couple of years, but the one I lease from (actually the third different company) does not control burn.
Quote from: greencop01 on June 23, 2020, 03:32:59 PMI believe that Tom Kelly's 'Hatful of Rabbits' has a quote on the front dust jacket about the fat turkeys from pine plantations must order pizza or something to that effect.
Quote from: Sixes on June 22, 2020, 10:49:33 PMNot paying to read it, but here in Georgia, there is no telling how many thousands of acres have been lost to pine plantations. that have hurt both turkeys and deer.