BSK
Well-Known Member
Ever wondered how much of your hunting property you actually hunt? That question came up among the hunters in my family. We have a 500-acre property, but how much of that acreage are we taking advantage of? Now I completely agree every managed property needs "no-go" sanctuaries. But beyond those designated areas, are hunters spreading themselves out or just hunting the same places over and over?
In fact, this idea is how my thread on road maintenance came about. One of my brothers and I were talking about how currently, all of our access roads on our property are on ridge-tops (old logging roads we converted to all-vehicle access). And as we get older, we tend to set up stands and hunt fairly close to these ridge-line access roads. Hunting near the bottoms of the valleys is just too much of a chore. Climbing 20-30 stories down very steep slopes, carrying all of our gear, and then back up, half the time in total darkness, is not appealing to 60 and 70-year-olds! So, I got to wondering, how much of our property are we actually hunting? To test this, I plotted every stand we've used for the last 10 years on a map and drew a 75-yard buffer around each one (approximately the average maximum visual range from a stand on our place). Then I measured all of the property outside of those 75-yard circles. Turns out, over the last 10 years, we've only hunted 54% of our property (46% unhunted). That blew me away considering how many hunters we often have on the place, especially during MZ season. And the vast majority of the unhunted property is unhunted simply because there is no easy access into those parts of the property. Hence the need to build new roads - so we will actual use all of the acreage we have available.
Do you know how much of your property you are actually using?
In fact, this idea is how my thread on road maintenance came about. One of my brothers and I were talking about how currently, all of our access roads on our property are on ridge-tops (old logging roads we converted to all-vehicle access). And as we get older, we tend to set up stands and hunt fairly close to these ridge-line access roads. Hunting near the bottoms of the valleys is just too much of a chore. Climbing 20-30 stories down very steep slopes, carrying all of our gear, and then back up, half the time in total darkness, is not appealing to 60 and 70-year-olds! So, I got to wondering, how much of our property are we actually hunting? To test this, I plotted every stand we've used for the last 10 years on a map and drew a 75-yard buffer around each one (approximately the average maximum visual range from a stand on our place). Then I measured all of the property outside of those 75-yard circles. Turns out, over the last 10 years, we've only hunted 54% of our property (46% unhunted). That blew me away considering how many hunters we often have on the place, especially during MZ season. And the vast majority of the unhunted property is unhunted simply because there is no easy access into those parts of the property. Hence the need to build new roads - so we will actual use all of the acreage we have available.
Do you know how much of your property you are actually using?
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