Our foodplots (except clover) were pretty much a bust this spring but I'm seeing more good bucks earlier than any other year. Believe it has to do with us burning approx 100 acres across ~15 areas combined with the wet spring.
Interesting point and thankfully (I guess ) I'm having to filter thru loads of doe/fawn pics to find these guys.Really healthy bucks, don't see many that fat this early for sure!
You getting a lot of doe pics?
Reason I asked is if this year is different seeing more bucks early, but fewer does usually means your habitat has degraded, not mproved. Does get the best habitat to rear fawns and the bachelor groups of bucks get pushed off to less desirable areas
Agree completely. During the season, we run very close to a 1:1 sex ratio. But right now, during fawn-rearing season, we're running 10.5 does per buck.Really healthy bucks, don't see many that fat this early for sure!
You getting a lot of doe pics?
Reason I asked is if this year is different seeing more bucks early, but fewer does usually means your habitat has degraded, not mproved. Does get the best habitat to rear fawns and the bachelor groups of bucks get pushed off to less desirable areas
Bryan - read/watched/listened to a lot of habitat guys about not turning your property into a doe sink. How do you balance out having great habitat but not so great that bucks get pushed out?Agree completely. During the season, we run very close to a 1:1 sex ratio. But right now, during fawn-rearing season, we're running 10.5 does per buck.
LOL, I'm not BSK, but what you are asking for is 2 completely different things whether you realize it or not.Bryan - read/watched/listened to a lot of habitat guys about not turning your property into a doe sink. How do you balance out having great habitat but not so great that bucks get pushed out?
My assumption that it depends on a multitude of factors and objectives. My home sits on 59 acres that I've done a lot of habitat work to and I hold several doe family groups year round. However during rut boy do the bucks move in. i assume on a larger property 1000+ acres you would want to see does and bucks taking residence in different areas not completely leave the property. Thoughts?
I'm not mega or BSK but I think a big part of it is geography- many of those managers are up north where high deer densities, short growing seasons, and smaller home ranges can put even more nutritional stress on a herd and habitat. It also seems to be a strategy focused on killing deer outside of the rut. That said, i don't but into the "out of sight, out of mind" mentality when it comes to managing deer. Those strategies don't work nearly as well in Tennessee hardwoods and they do in small broken woodlots that back up to picked crop fieldsThanks mega… I think the root of my question is why are so many managers against making your property a "doe sink"?
I also prefer to manage for the rut by holding does and pulling in bucks which to me points to the benefit of making your property a "doe sink" As you mentioned the difficult part is making your property attractive but not TOO attractive which we are dealing with now. We have half a dozen plots that are 4+ acres (2 are 10+ acres) and we can't grow a good crop of soybeans due to the browse pressure. Already planting seeds for a good old fashioned doe-ma-geddon this year to try and drop our numbers.
I think the root of my question is why are so many managers against making your property a "doe sink"?
I think this exactly right...If you've ever seen one it would be clear. My brother has one. It's a real phenomena. His place is about the size of yours but is in southern Ohio where baiting is legal. Not only is the place managed to the hilt, no expense spared, but he also runs two supplemental feed sites year round. They've got hardwood mast, regen cuts, an orchard, food plots, a pond, maincured trail system throughout, etc. And deer are everywhere.......if you like hunting does & sub 2yr old bucks. He's killed two older class bucks in ten years and only one was really big enough to tip your hat at. He's had a few true giants on cam in the same timeframe but almost exclusively at night and only in the heat of the seeking phase. Otherwise it's a buck desert that he spends exorbinant money on. He suspects and I agree that his does actually leave the property to get bred, then immediately return. The breeding is happening because he has fawns all over the place all summer long, but with the lack of bucks being seen from stand or trail cam, it's hard imagine any other scenario besides the girls leaving to get bred.
After hunting the place many, many years and observing the behavior of the deer I have concluded that the sheer number of unreceptive does make it too uncomfortable for older bucks to visit, and I think they might actually push the estrus does out while they're hot. It's pretty normal for an estrus doe to separate from her group until breeding has occurred. The bucks I believe cruise the periphery of the property and encounter enough receptive wandering estrus does that there is not much reason to stress themselves with all the naggy Karens inside his place. I could be reading it all wrong but that's ceretainly what appears to be happening. Whatever the reason, his place is covered up with does & young deer while almost never having an older class buck to hunt, even during rut.
What you want is a property that provides everything... food, cover, does. And there is always such a thing as 'too much of a good thing. Too much food, and they can feed after dark. Too much cover and you never see them. Too many does and esteus does become a dime a dozen . You want to provide everything, but in balance. And that's the fun part of management.
temporary deer density
Ski,
We set an all-time record for unique bucks on my place last year with 70. Average is 38. However, the number of older bucks (2 1/2+) were only up a little (average is 18 and we picked up 24). We just had the most amazing, massive influx of yearling bucks I've ever seen. And most were not resident. They were dispersing/wandering yearlings that we would get on cam for a week or two and then they were gone. Never seen anything like it. We normally get around 20 yearling bucks each year. Last year we photographed 46 unique yearlings!