8 Management Principles Guaranteed to Boost your Lands Wildlife populations!

umchorn2

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If you want to maintain stable or growing wildlife populations in general here are some of the rules I follow. On my property they are laws. Follow these 8 principles like the Quaran if you want to turn your woodlot or farm into a hot zone for local wildlife. This methodology can be applied to any suitable habitat in the world that has wildlife and I guarantee results!

1) Only shoot mature animals of the species, including predators, and generally only in years of noticable abundance (cyclical population high). This ensures proper herd age structure as the herd always has an animal to take the older animals place should it die.

2) Never shoot females of any species. You need them to breed. You are only one bad winter away from turing your population high into a population low. Remember, as a rule every doe or cow moose you shoot takes 5 animals out of your herd. The doe, it's 2 fawns of the year and 2 embryos for next year.

3) Maintain the highest density of wildlife you can on the property. The animals will establish territories with dominant individuals "ruling the roost". Subordinate animals will leave the area or be chased away if the density becomes too great or predators will move in to thin the herd.

4) If there are no 5+ year old animals to shoot on the property, shoot a cull buck/bull which has 4 points or less per side and is mature (3.5 yrs old or older). He has no trophy potential but is fully grown and will yield maximum meat. A buck is not a male deer with 10 centimeter antlers, thats's a fawn or yearling. Bucks are 3.5 years old or older, which in animal terms usually means it's old enough to breed.

5) Improve or supplement the food on the property if need be. Keeping your herds healthy means providing proper nutrition, especially so pregnant females can have many healthy fawns and helps protect your herd from disease as the animals are in the best condition that they can be in at any given time.

6) Extensive surveillance of the property ensures the manager knows what is on the property during any given year. I have 13 trail cams on the property (470 acres) which capture travel corridors, bedding areas, and feeding areas. Without adequate surveillance and population surveys you will not be able to optimally put into practice and carry out a management plan.

7) Control access to authorized personnel only. People who you can trust to carry out your management philosophy. Quality deer/trophy management in this case. Make your management plan a condition of hunting permission on the property. You do not have to grant access to your property. If you do, clearly state your expectations to the hunter, including the animals that are on the hitlist and which are not. Anyone who hunts my lands will have to put in sweat equity to improve the property if they want to come back next year. Involve your neighbours in wildlife management. Wildlife generally requires large areas of land to thrive and cooperating with neighbours to carry out some basic core priciples will go a long way to attracting, retaining, improving and increasing the quantity and quality of wildlife on your property and in the area.

8) Report trespassers and poachers. They don't help with the management plan. We have resource officers and courts for a reason. You pay a lot in taxes to have them, use them both.
 
First off, I don't follow the Quran......

Second off, this is a bunch of tripe....... especially number two.......

Keep going Umchorn, you are doing terrific..........

What is your plot size again?..... 40 acres?....
 
First off, I don't follow the Quran......

Second off, this is a bunch of tripe....... especially number two.......

Keep going Umchorn, you are doing terrific..........

What is your plot size again?..... 40 acres?....

I certainly have no interest in the Quran myself, however the rest of the advice seems fairly sound to me. Obviously all properties are somewhat unique however these seem like fairy solid common sense guidelines.
He also stated 470acres.
 
Kind of makes me want to walk into a farmers Field and shoot a milk cow and hang it's head on a wall
 
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I certainly have no interest in the Quran myself, however the rest of the advice seems fairly sound to me. Obviously all properties are somewhat unique however these seem like fairy solid common sense guidelines.
He also stated 470acres.

Two ignored principles......

1- deer are not unlike humans....... one buck can impreganate several does in a given year

2- Not all does are fertile...... so harvesting infertilite does (they still go into heat), is good strategy...... it keeps the bucks on task and puts good meat in the freezer.....


Now, the biggest principle...... everything I said above is absolute bull####....... but was meant to counter absolute bull####... nature has mechanisms in place to mitigate these things and will take care of its own...... it doesn't have a "program" that in place to ensure umchorn can harvest a buck with big antlers....... it just does what it does, and to me that is what makes the chase and the observation more fascinating........

I have no desire to play doctor Doolittle.......... but some do.....
 
Reference to the Quran has no place is this forum.
That said when you have 3500 acres of family land to hunt on you have to get to know wildlife behavior, be respectful to make sure the next generation have a place to hunt.
Managing access to the land is part of it. When I see locally that deer population is low and don't buy a tag I wait for the next season and manage the land to give the deer a chance.
 
#2 is false, and the whole list perpetuates old management strategies. Harvesting a certain number of females and juveniles is fine. Harvesting only mature (lets face it, this whole thread is about big bucks) males will result in the collapse of the herd. All of the mature males will be harvested for their antlers, leaving only immature males and lots of females. Not all of the females will be bred, they die off from old age and predation, and soon you have no deer.
 
470 acres? So if these animals are not fenced in do you really think you're managing the same animals from year to year?
Yes, many of the animals live on the property for years. I have a deer that I found his matching antlers as a 3 year old. He was on the trail cam the next year as well. I also have a bear with distinguishing markings on cam for years. That's how I know many of the animals have been there for years and thus I wait till they have attained breeding age for a minimum of 2 years prior to hunting them.

My bull elk is a boone and crockett 6X6 specimen. Stays mostly in the area as it is safe for him when compared to other areas. Plus the general area has only 4 landowners for 2000 acres and only one road in that deadends at my property. I have several deer sheds that suggest a mature age structure on the property. Thick old 4 points and even a mid 160's 6 point.

By targeting older bucks that have already had years to pass on their genes, I assure I am not taking them before they have a chance at passing their genes into the population. Because it is difficult to assess which females possess the best genes (in my opinion), I just avoid shooting them. True some will die of old age. A problem which typically never happens on heavily hunted crown lands. On those lands so few animals reach maturity that my analysis after years of hunting and collecting hundreds of shed antlers has revealed a ratio of 1 mature buck for 10 does/immature animals. On my property it's closer to half that if not better.

Another important point about shooting the big older bucks instead of the does is the meat to weight ratio. A mature buck will yield 50% meat. A mature doe is 40% max. Younger deer and fawn will be 25-30% max meat to weight. So really you would need to shoot 2 mature does to get the same meat off a 215 pound mature buck.

Does this provide better clarification?
Sahara...would you provide your management strategies or philosophy?
 
I don't know where your property is, but since you have elk, I'm guessing it's around one of the parks. As an absentee landowner, I hope the jacklighting market hunters don't discover your hidden paradise. They can throw an awfully large wrench into the spokes of any management practice you think you may have.
 
I don't know where your property is, but since you have elk, I'm guessing it's around one of the parks. As an absentee landowner, I hope the jacklighting market hunters don't discover your hidden paradise. They can throw an awfully large wrench into the spokes of any management practice you think you may have.

So can an influx of predators in an artificially managed bubble... good thing wolves don't have opposble thumbs and wire cutters...
 
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