The wind came in hard a couple of days ago. Straight out of the west, skipping across Lake Michigan like a flat stone, and came slamming into our woods.
Some of my timber — just 100 trees — had been selectively cut a few years agi, and my intention was to check things out. The wind early was about 20 miles per hour, and it kept blowing harder as the day went on. I wanted to check things out, look for deer tracks in the snow, and start making plans for hunting sites for next fall. I know where deer bed in my area but it was not my intention to go through those spots today or to put up stands anywhere near them next year.I need bedding cover and food plots.
Any removal of timber changes the complexion of a wood-lot. The sole purpose of cutting down some trees is to increase the amount of sunlight that hits the forest floor. The more sunlight, the greater the new growth that will spring up, including trees to be cut in the future.
Planning what I hope to accomplish.
A little trimming here and there, and the judicious use of brush-piles can help funnel deer from the bedding to the feeding area. It's my thought to stay away during most of the winter, and then look at it again after the majority of the snow has melted next spring.
I want the soil to drain well but retain some moisture. The sun has to get to the seeds and when the ground is warm enough, the seed will do its job. I want well-rooted plants, and I want this additional food source within 150 yards of the bedding area. I expect to build two or three elevated coops in strategic locations. The coops will offer plenty of room to turn around in, and offer 15-20-yard bow shots. I'm not looking for lots of deer, but it would be nice to have one really good buck show up every year.Rather than travel we hope to hunt near home.
I love to hunt new spots, but my failing vision prevents me from driving home at night. I must depend on Kay for the driving, and once it turns cold, she rarely hunts. So … the answer is to hunt closer to home.
We know we won't see as many deer — bucks or does — here as we would in other areas but we'll be able to slip away more often during the rut and hunt during mid-day. If the wind switches we'll be only minutes from the house instead of being an hour away. When the snow falls, and icy roads become treacherous, we'll still be near the house. It's doubtful if we'll have another timber cutting for another 10 years. It will give us plenty of opportunity to work with what we have, build our coops according, hang ladder-stands where they should do the most good, and get to know our local deer population again. It wasn't much but that is what I did today. There will be a great deal of work to be done next spring and summer, but in the long run, we think it will be worth it after we put our sweat equity into it. Putting together a mix of good food choices in the right spot, allow plenty of room for bedding, and hunting the fringes of the heavy cover should produce for us.Posted via email from Dave Richey Outdoors

