GRANT: I feel the frustration. Pie and slice forestry management plan. Nesting habitat. Feeding habitat. Old trees, so easy to hunt. I’ve traveled to assist several landowners
throughout the whitetails’ range recently and I've enjoyed sharing with you some of
the habitat and hunting improvement techniques we’ve recommended that they apply to their
properties. GRANT: During a recent trip Clay, our spring
intern, Nigel, and myself traveled to northern Missouri - almost to the Iowa line - to assist
a landowner. GRANT: One of the biggest features on his
property was a recent timber harvest. I’ll share with you my observations of this
recent timber harvest and the advice I gave this landowner for future timber harvest to
improve the habitat quality and hunting at his property. GRANT: Northern Missouri is known for great
deer and deer hunting. In general, the habitat is a mixture of ag
fields, cattle pasture and mature hardwood timber. Most of the timber stands in this area are
even age. That means most of the trees are about the
same size and same age. And that’s a result of repetitive high grading
through the years, where they took the best and left the rest, creating a homogeneous
habitat. GRANT: It doesn’t take much time for timber
harvests like this to result in another closed canopy forest which is shading out any beneficial
growth for food or cover at the forest floor. GRANT: As we know, in a closed canopy forest,
there’s no sun reaching the forest floor. We end up with a pile of leaves down there
and very little food or cover being produced. In that forest, you hope for some acorns to
drop during the fall and there’s nothing else that really benefits deer, turkey, quail,
and many other species of wildlife. GRANT: During the summer a closed canopy forest
isn't a big issue if the other land is used to grow productive crops such as soybeans. There will be plenty of food and cover during
the growing season. GRANT: Combines are extremely efficient anymore. And once those crops are harvested, wildlife
go from feast to famine. GRANT: When deer have to make a living in
a closed canopy forest during the winter and the local crop fields have been picked clean,
there’s no way they're going to express their full genetic potential. GRANT: When we arrived at Mr. Kline’s property,
my first mission was to sit down and discuss his goals and objectives for the property. JASON: So that’s my goal. Kill mature deer and have a place where my
boys can hunt and we’re not dealing with what we deal with in PA. But I’m overwhelmed. Now I don't know what to do. Like I have all these things and it’s like,
man, every year it’s like - you know what I mean? I’m just, I’m not pointed in a direction,
so that’s where… GRANT: I feel the frustration. I hear you. And I believe I can help you. So let’s discuss these one at a time. JASON: Okay. GRANT: Once we talked about his goals and
objectives, we got more specific with the different portions of the land by studying
it using the onX map. GRANT: You want as much food in the central
part of your property and cover - CRP - on these outside edges. JASON: Okay. GRANT: So you want them bedding here and going
this way. You don’t want them bedding here and they
could easily go this way as this way. JASON: Hmm, hmm. GRANT: Having a better understanding of his
goals and objectives, I was eager to tour the property, even though it was windy and
cold. GRANT: I assumed the ag components would be
fairly standard and I was really interested to go check out that large block of timber
that had been recently harvested. ANNOUNCER: GrowingDeer is brought to you by
Bass Pro Shops and Cabela’s. Also by Reconyx, Eagle Seed, Winchester, LaCrosse
Footwear, Morrell Targets, Hooyman, Hook’s Custom Calls, Summit Treestands, RTP Outdoors,
Yamaha, Fourth Arrow, onX Hunt, Scorpion Venom Archery, Bloodsport Arrows, Code Blue, D/Code,
G5 Broadheads, Prime Bows, and Redneck Hunting Blinds. GRANT: Hey, continuing through Jason’s property. And he’s had some logging recently in a
primarily white oak stand. Logging has benefits and some parts that are
not as good. That’s just true for any practice, right? But a big stump behind us. GRANT: The loggers pretty much took the biggest
stumps - that’s one form of forestry. And they're going to consider these the next
crop coming on. I’m always working to improve the land,
so I would rather take the larger, crooked trees and leave the straightest trees here. GRANT: White oaks live, you know, three, four,
500 years old. So a lot of people manage these for a 30-year
rotation or an 80-year rotation. I like to manage white oaks on a couple hundred
year rotation, but they took the crown out of here, obviously, opened it up, which is
great. Because I’m seeing lots of saplings and
brambles and this will turn green. GRANT: Now, there’s a lot of white oaks
in here and a huge amount of fuel. But ideally, we would back a fire through
here. We would start on the ridgetop, back it to
the bottom and get this leaf litter off so more green would grow. Then we would have tremendous cover and food
in this area. GRANT: Jason said this was just normal closed
canopy - nothing but leaves before he cut it. JASON: Oh, yeah. GRANT: So this is a big advantage for what
it was. But when you fell big, mature, live, green
trees and they fall and they fall against another tree or skidders are dragging out
logs and they cut the corner, a lot of trees are scarred. So they're not near as valuable. GRANT: So what I prefer to do is do clear
cut. So let’s just say the amount of wood they
cut out here was equal to about 10 acres. And they cut that off 50 acres or 100 acres
or whatever. I’d rather take that 10-acre block and do
a clear cut - remove everything. Get maximum growth, maximum sun down and that
way you're not scarring the residual trees. And then these residual trees - like the scars
right behind us - so they would be more valuable when you cut the next 10 acres. JASON: Right. GRANT: And another way to look at that is,
let’s say you cut 10 acres now, and you skip a few years, and you cut 10 acres, and
you skip a few years, cut 10 acres - you still can get old trees but now you’ve got a constant
source of income coming in. JASON: Right. GRANT: So you're playing the market. Timber’s high; timber’s low. You average that out over time, so you're
trying to pick it. You don’t have all these scarred trees and
you have a mosaic of young, medium, old timber which is better for wildlife. Because now we’ve got all the same age class
and everything’s going to grow up at the same. JASON: Right. GRANT: By removing all the trees from a smaller
area, you can end up with the same volume of wood as selective cutting a much larger
area. But the result is much different. GRANT: By making a small clear cut, you have
definitive edges and pinch points which make it much easier to pattern deer and hunt. In a few years, the same treatment can be
used to a different portion of the forest, giving you a different age structure throughout
the stand. GRANT: Several years ago I started using this
technique and I call it the pie and slice forestry management plan. Simply stated, imagine the entire tract of
timber as a pie or maybe multiple pies depending on the size of the tract of timber. The size of each slice and how many slices
are in the pie depend on the landowner’s objective and the amount of timber we’re
trying to manage. GRANT: The first year, one slice of each pie
is cut and the amount of time that passes before another slice is cut depends on the
age of the timber when we start the project and, again, the landowner’s objectives. GRANT: When it’s time to harvest the second
slice, I skip a slice in between the original slice that was cut and where I’m gonna harvest. And that gives me a great mosaic of different
habitat types. GRANT: Typically, I have nine slices or certainly
an odd number of slices. And if you skip a slice, that means you go
around the pie twice before every slice is cut. You don’t want an even number or you’ll
end up on top of a slice where you’ve already harvested within fairly recent times. GRANT: Now consider a pie that’s had four
or five cuts in it and you can easily see we have young, medium and old timber all throughout
the area. We’ve got perfect nesting habitat, fawning
habitat, brooding habitat, feeding habitat, soft mass habitat and now we’ve got some
small mass species - you know, 10, 12 years old. They're maturing and they're putting out all
the berries or fruit. We’ve got old trees that are making acorns
- all with hard edges in between ‘em. It is so easy to hunt versus a contiguous
stand of timber that’s been high graded. GRANT: You’ve often heard me reference the
hack-and-squirt technique to improve wildlife habitat quality in timbered areas. And that’s a great technique when the trees
are not large enough or the right species to be merchantable. They can't be harvested and yield a profit
to the landowner. GRANT: At Mr. Kline’s property, the forest
had been managed in the past - high graded but allowed to get old - so that the trees
were marketable and just killing them on site would not have been a good use of that resource. GRANT: Hack-and-squirt can still play an important
management role in a pie slice design. Let’s say they harvest all the merchantable
trees, but there’s some three- or four-inch sweetgums or something out there that there’s
no market for. You don’t want them having a competitive
advantage of the more merchantable trees, profitable trees, growing. So you hack-and-squirt them and take them
out of that slice. GRANT: I mentioned at Mr. Kline’s property
there were some saplings coming up in the high graded area. And there will probably be more and more. Those saplings can be worse than an uncut
closed canopy forest. They can form an under canopy - one below
the top canopy - effectively sealing out all sun from reaching the forest floor. So now you have nothing growing at the ground
level and no visibility because there’s so many stems six to ten feet tall. GRANT: To offset this Mr. Kline is going to
need to use prescribed fire, maybe mowing or herbicide to limit the amount of saplings
that are going to mature and make shade in that area. GRANT: As we continued the tour and saw some
of his food plots or ag fields, I noticed, well, they were bare. There was no food in that area and there were
several weeks of winter left. GRANT: We’re continuing through Jason’s
property and we’ve come through a food plot where he had drilled in oats and, of course,
there’s nothing here. It looks like straw laying down. So, we’re in northern Missouri. Jason, it gets cold up here. It’s cold today. GRANT: I’m putting my hood up as soon as we’re done
here, so. Oats are just not that cold tolerant. Cover crop farmers use oats because they know
the cold is going to kill it, so they don’t have to terminate it the next the spring. So you could have planted oats, but you needed
some cereal rye, or some brassicas, or something mixed in it, so there would be some food here
now. Because right now it’s just a, you know,
biological desert. JASON: Yeah. GRANT: Not even much scat or tracks out here. So that’s why I always like blends, especially
in the cool season or the fall - the winter stuff. I want something that’s good early - might
be oats or whatever - mid and late season. This probably did pretty well early, maybe
mid, but late - nothing. I recommended Mr. Kline start using the Buffalo
System to ensure there’s food available in all the plots year-round. GRANT: As I’ve shared in the past, the healthiest
deer herds have food available year around. They don’t hit that late summer or late
winter stress period and be out of groceries. Because if they do, there’s no chance they
can express their genetic potential. GRANT: After touring the entire property,
we returned to Mr. Kline’s cabin, warmed up, pulled out a map and discussed all aspects
of what I’d seen and finalized a plan that will improve the habitat quality and huntability
of his property. GRANT: I want to convert these very outside
fields to commercial ag or CRP. JASON: Hmm, hmm. GRANT: In these interior fields, as much as
budget allows, should be converted to providing food for deer. GRANT: I’m very confident Mr. Kline and
his family are in for some really good years of deer and turkey hunting at his farm. GRANT: Daniel, Clay and I are getting ready to head to South Florida to chase Osceola turkeys. If you've got turkey fever like we do, watch some of our videos at our turkey hunting playlist. And to make sure you don't miss these upcoming hunts and the techniques we use, hit that bell to make sure you get notifications of our next episodes. GRANT: The conditions are getting favorable
here at The Proving Grounds to use prescribed fire as a habitat improvement tool and those
are days I always enjoy. GRANT: But no matter what you're doing, I
hope you take time to get outside and enjoy Creation and, most importantly, take time
every day to be quiet and listen to what the Creator is saying to you. GRANT: Thanks for watching GrowingDeer. MALE: There’s a what? FEMALE: There is a buck. UNKNOWN: You see a buck? UNKNOWN: Oh, there’s a bunch of them. CLAY: Those other ones are shed bucks. GRANT: Yeah. Probably so. Are you filming? CLAY: Yeah. (Inaudible) MALE: Watch if that (Inaudible) falls off
there. CLAY: That one on the far right is definitely
an older deer. GRANT: Old deer.Yeah. That’s your favorite buck right there. (Fades Out)