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Converting an Unmanaged Pine Stand to Quality Habitat (686)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 фев 2022
  • An Alabama property has new owners that want to improve a clear cut with a dense volunteer stand of pines for better deer habitat and hunting. Grant tours the land and gives the steps to improve the habitat and hunting quality on this property.
    Check out this video if you want to see more details on managing timber stands, • How to Manage Timber S...
    Whether you own 20 acres or 200 acres, improving habitat can be a great way to see and harvest more quality critters. Great habitat also allows landowners to enjoy their property throughout the entire year.
    Super dense stands of saplings are common when a mature stand of pines are harvested and the area is not somehow prepped and replanted.
    This is a great example of why it’s best to always have a post-harvest plan, especially if the area is a clear-cut. For the first year or two after a clear-cut there’s often quality wildlife habitat. However, once the pine or hardwood seedlings and saplings shade out the soil, it quickly becomes a biological desert.
    ‪@GrowingDeerTV‬
    #TeamOutdoors #Forestry #DeerHunting

Комментарии • 45

  • @Mcss-lu5hv
    @Mcss-lu5hv Год назад +3

    I have 170 acres in Southern Ms just like this. My Son and I are trying to make our plan now to start improving the timber and the habitat.

  • @jasonwoods4707
    @jasonwoods4707 2 года назад +7

    Great episode! I’m actually in Alabama as well and really enjoyed learning about your thoughts about managing a balanced habitat in this area.

  • @southernpine79
    @southernpine79 2 года назад +3

    Found you guys about a month ago. I was fresh off deer season here in Alabama and wasn’t ready for it to be over yet haha. Learning ft your videos has renewed my interest in habit and forest management. Looking forward to using many of your techniques and strategies on our hunting grounds in the seasons to come. We have a really good area with a few good deer. I’ve watched several dozen of your videos and can see that if we follow in your footsteps we could have a healthier habit and a much healthier and heartier herd of deer.

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  2 года назад

      I look forward to updates from your project and our paths crossing!

  • @justinmadair
    @justinmadair 2 года назад +2

    Love the information in the vid. One little piece of feedback: the song you chose (which is a great song) starting at 1:52 and running until ca 4:13 is what is known as a "wall of sound". This song competed with Grant being able to dole out the info. Love the show. Been an avid watcher for years now. Hope you take my feedback in the spirit it's intended.

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  2 года назад +1

      Thanks Justin and I'll share with the editors!

  • @lifeonthehilltn
    @lifeonthehilltn 2 года назад +1

    You hit the nail on the head with this one! This is so much like the average land owner and I'm sure many folks can relate to purchasing property and not knowing how to get to the finish line that they have in their mind!

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  2 года назад

      Thanks! Jay and Jenny are off to a great start!

    • @tbrown913
      @tbrown913 Год назад

      @GrowingDeer.tv is there any update to this property? Im in Georgia and my hunting club is 1200 acres of pines with just a few acres of hardwoods along the creek. We see so few deer after Thanksgiving because there is no food. We are trying to implement some changes.

  • @joshsinglefooter
    @joshsinglefooter 2 года назад +1

    These past two episodes have been a sooo entertaining and knowledgeable. Thsnks for passing it doen Mr. Grant.

  • @talon769
    @talon769 2 года назад +1

    God bless, brother Grant!!

  • @wyattjones7979
    @wyattjones7979 2 года назад +1

    Such a cool video. The area I hunt on it managed for timber so it sucks for wildlife, it is very similar to that property and I wish I had the money to buy the whole thing and get Grant out there to fix it up.

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  2 года назад

      Wyatt - Start small and stay focused on your goal! Thanks for watching!!

  • @jerryhill4893
    @jerryhill4893 2 года назад +2

    Great stuff , Doc. Thanks. God bless

  • @h-minus2212
    @h-minus2212 Год назад +1

    What an informative video. I am pulling for that young couple - if they follow your prescription, the land should turn out idyllic.

  • @dana44169
    @dana44169 2 года назад +1

    Just the video I need,Thanks!

  • @mattreynolds792
    @mattreynolds792 2 года назад +1

    Love the videos

  • @collegeguy14
    @collegeguy14 2 года назад +1

    Alabama have to have a certified burn boss to light it up.
    Georgia teaches you run a flanking fire through that stand to keep it moving and have less flare ups. Like you said if you kill some trees it doesn’t matter. Get a chainsaw crew in there. Normally there is cost sharing to help with the chainsaw thin and the soil work they need for the erosion control.

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  2 года назад

      Jay is checking with the Alabama Forestry Commission.

  • @edwardclark2695
    @edwardclark2695 2 года назад +2

    Thanks

  • @jarrodlambert3914
    @jarrodlambert3914 Год назад +1

    Nice

  • @JayN4GO
    @JayN4GO 2 года назад +4

    Yep they cut and left a mess. Hope they got this cheap.

  • @Kurtdog63
    @Kurtdog63 2 года назад +1

    I would think maybe dozing strips thru those young pines in multiple directions might be an alternative to simply burning and killing them all then starting back at zero?

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  2 года назад +2

      Dozing always means soil compaction and big expense. It will also leave too many of the trees - even in the narrow rows that are left standing. Burning cost much less, doesn't cause compaction, and will leave a Mosaic pattern of trees, grasses, and forbs.

    • @Kurtdog63
      @Kurtdog63 2 года назад

      @@GrowingDeerTV Yes. Ok. I guess I assumed that a burn killed everything, so there are some survivors. Good to know.

  • @rawzy5282
    @rawzy5282 Год назад +1

    What imaging software is that? I haven’t been able to find something like that in my searching

  • @laredfishaddict3442
    @laredfishaddict3442 Год назад +1

    What is the best herbicide to terminate southern pine trees?

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  Год назад +1

      Some folks use glyphosate. The application method will determine which herbicide to use. Simply search on controlling pines with herbicide.

  • @CentralMississippiWhitetail
    @CentralMississippiWhitetail Год назад +1

    I see a guy advocating to stop planting summer food. Lol he’s never been in the South where there’s no AG.

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  Год назад +1

      David - I schooled at the University of Georgia and Clemson and will be assisting a landowner near Macon, GA Tuesday. I really like food plots, but don't wish to ignore the biggest majority of most properties - the native habitat.

    • @CentralMississippiWhitetail
      @CentralMississippiWhitetail Год назад

      @@GrowingDeerTV I grew up hunting cutovers. We knew after year 6 it was downhill. You’ve opened our eyes that we can keep it like the “6th year” for much longer. I’m more into wildlife conservation now than deer hunting because of you and Sturgis. The future is very bright..thank you.

  • @southerncutoutdoors
    @southerncutoutdoors 5 месяцев назад

    How would you go about asking the timber company that owns our club to burn it haha? They thinned it last year.

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  5 месяцев назад

      I doubt the timber company will deviate from their plans.

  • @Northof25A
    @Northof25A 11 месяцев назад +2

    Mine looks like this i have 500 acres in Tennessee 100 acres of it is planted pine about 15 years ago planted should i thin the pine acres and do a burn after

    • @GrowingDeerTV
      @GrowingDeerTV  11 месяцев назад +2

      If there's not much sun reaching the soil the pines need to be thinned. However, the pine market in Tennessee is weak. I hope there's a market for your pines!

    • @Northof25A
      @Northof25A 11 месяцев назад

      @@GrowingDeerTV I appreciate you responding would it be okay to do a burn like you did on that property instead of even thinning them? My pines are way way bigger but has the same exact look literally to a tee