Tallredd
New Member
Wanted to start a conversation about inspiring folks in our neighborhoods to board the QDM and habitat management train. Not just about deer management but habitat management (and even predator management) that benefits all kinds of wildlife. For example, I live in Overton County and I am fortunate enough to have a small farm with neighboring farms on both sides of me whose owners who to see bigger deer. We more or less have an understanding of not taking any bucks under 3 1/2-4 years old and mature does only. There are other neighbors (land owners and hunters who rent ground) that I would like to bring over to the light but it is definitely more challenging as they are a bit more reclusive and fall for the "if I don't shoot it now, someone else will" mentality (AKA Tragedy of the Commons).
On the habitat side of things, while my adjoining neighbors have a pretty good rule for an age limit for deer, they do not understand the value of good quality habitat. No doubt, when they hear the word "habitat" they immediately think of food plots. While food plots can be beneficial, deer are browsers and can and will eat just about any type of vegetative matter in the woods. They are more like goats than anything. I have noticed a lack of good cover for fawning and bedding in my immediate area and have tried to alleviate that by establishing buffers around field edges and even letting the back part and lest productive portions of the fields to go fallow/wild with mowing every 2-3 years . And on turkeys, trying to inspire folks that if they wait just 2 or 3 more weeks to begin hay mowing, the hen turkeys will be off the nests for the most part, and the chicks will be able to fly when jumped up.
All that to say this....do any of you have any advice or tips to engage the neighborhood landowners and hunters? What has your experience been, if any?
On the habitat side of things, while my adjoining neighbors have a pretty good rule for an age limit for deer, they do not understand the value of good quality habitat. No doubt, when they hear the word "habitat" they immediately think of food plots. While food plots can be beneficial, deer are browsers and can and will eat just about any type of vegetative matter in the woods. They are more like goats than anything. I have noticed a lack of good cover for fawning and bedding in my immediate area and have tried to alleviate that by establishing buffers around field edges and even letting the back part and lest productive portions of the fields to go fallow/wild with mowing every 2-3 years . And on turkeys, trying to inspire folks that if they wait just 2 or 3 more weeks to begin hay mowing, the hen turkeys will be off the nests for the most part, and the chicks will be able to fly when jumped up.
All that to say this....do any of you have any advice or tips to engage the neighborhood landowners and hunters? What has your experience been, if any?